A former Massachusetts water official is proposing a new network of
central Massachusetts reservoirs to meet population-driven demand that
he says will outstrip current supplies in the coming decades.
Tom Baron, former director of operations for the Massachusetts Water
Resources Authority, said his proposed 16-reservoir expansion of the
current reservoir system for Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode
Island will meet the needs of most of southern New England for the next
century and beyond. The additional supplies are needed, he said,
because the three-state region adds 64,000 people per year, which would
result in a 60 percent increase in the region’s population over the
next century.
If built with a mind to sustainable resource extraction and power
generation, he said, the project would cost ratepayers just a dime a
day for the 30-year duration of bonds issued to pay for the
construction.
Baron outlined his plan Tuesday evening (April 7) at the Geological
Museum’s Haller Hall as part of the Harvard University Center for the
Environment’s Green Conversations lecture series. After his
presentation, Baron was joined in a discussion by Harvard Forest
Director David Foster and Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of
Environmental Engineering and Environmental Health John Briscoe.
Foster questioned whether building large new reservoirs was an
appropriate strategy in a social climate where the emphasis is on
conservation and using fewer resources. He pointed out that during a
five-year drought in the 1960s there was a huge public outcry and
demand for new reservoirs. Subsequent conservation — driven by the
imposition of a water-use fee needed to pay for Boston Harbor cleanup —
greatly reduced demand. The reservoirs were never built.
“We don’t have to live by the projections of the past,” Foster said.
Baron insisted, however, that today’s situation is different. While
population growth continues across southern New England, conservation
efforts have already driven water use down from 200 gallons per person
to between 80 and 100 gallons. In addition, leaks in the pipeline that
brings water from the Quabbin Reservoir in central Massachusetts to
Boston — which used to result in the loss of 10 percent of the system’s
water — have been plugged.
“These [conservation proposals] are necessary steps, but we cannot
conserve to zero,” Baron said. “All of these individual efforts are
necessary, but in the end, the ultimate bottom line is we have to build
bigger.”
Baron’s plan, which has yet to find a legislative champion, would
build 16 new reservoirs, mainly in the highlands of central
Massachusetts. That location would save the cost of pumping the water
by allowing gravity flow to the major population centers of southern
New England: Boston, Providence, Hartford, New Haven, and Connecticut’s
suburbs near New York City.
The plan is designed to pay for itself in part. Baron proposes
mining gravel from the reservoir beds, erecting 200 wind turbines on
the inaccessible watershed lands that would result, and incorporating
hydropower in the reservoir designs. The hydropower component could be
utilized to generate both power and money as the water flows to the
cities and through a plan to exchange water between reservoirs,
generating power during the day when rates are high and pumping it back
uphill at night when rates are low. More revenues would come from
timber — both the initial cutting of the land to be submerged and
ongoing maintenance cutting in the watershed.
The proposal would provide enough storage capacity to hold a three-year
supply of water for the region, which should be enough to weather
droughts and forestall the need for water restrictions and water bans.
Baron said the water supply system that is operating today was
conceived over 100 years ago. The 1895 plan resulted in the
construction of the Wachusett and Quabbin reservoirs and has largely
succeeded in providing a safe water supply for Boston metropolitan
communities.
Baron said that though the region’s population has been growing
steadily, ample water is still available, it just has to be managed.
Just one-third of the annual runoff from rainstorms would provide water
for 34 million people. Just a third of the annual flow of the
Connecticut and Merrimack rivers would supply an additional 37 million
people.
“It’s not that we don’t have the water resources, it depends on how we want to use [them],” Baron said.
While Boston’s water supply has several years’ worth of storage
capacity, the reservoirs that supply Springfield, Providence, and
Hartford have just one or two years’ storage, making them vulnerable in
drought years, Baron said. His proposal would provide enough water to,
at current growth rates, see the region through the next two to three
centuries.