Title: |
Harnessing Energy and Water in the Salton Sea |
Authors: |
Nikola LAKIC |
Key Words: |
Geothermal Power, Hydro Power, Electricity, Importing Seawater, In-Line-Pump, In-Line- Generator, Solar Power, Renewable Energy, Heat Exchanger, Desalinization, Potable Water, Extraction of Lithium, Clean Environment, Wildlife Sanctuary, Tourism, Fishery. |
Conference: |
Stanford Geothermal Workshop |
Year: |
2024 |
Session: |
General |
Language: |
English |
Paper Number: |
Lakic |
File Size: |
5543 KB |
View File: |
|
The Salton Sea in California is a terminal lake with reduced inflow from the Colorado River because of the water transfers related to the drought and the Quantification Settlement Agreement (QSA). The Lake is shrinking and exposing the receding shoreline (toxic playa) to the elements and facing oncoming environmental disasters. The presented proposal is a long-term solution for the restoration of the Salton Sea. It includes an Architectural Plan that harmoniously incorporates several patented technologies into a self-sustaining organism. The presented proposal includes several options based on the same concept: 1) Dividing the Lake into three sections; 2) Importing seawater from the Ocean; 3) Harnessing prevalent geothermal energy. Dividing the lake into three sections (Central and two smaller Northern and Southern sections), redirecting the New River and Alamo River back to Mexico, and exchanging it for importing seawater into the central section of the lake - would provide a condition for tourism (exclusive real-estate, beaches, resorts, hotels, etc.), and vast wildlife sanctuary. The presented proposal also implements several breakthrough technologies such as a) harnessing solar energy in combination with a pipeline system; b) harnessing prevalent geothermal energy which is accessible in the Salton Sea area by using a completely closed-loop heat exchange system for the generation of electricity, desalinization of the lake, and production of the potable water as a free by-product; c) Providing a concentrated salty brine as a free by-product which is a source for the extraction of lithium, and providing a safe depot for waste material after extraction of Lithium.
Press the Back button in your browser, or search again.
Copyright 2024, Stanford Geothermal Program: Readers who download papers from this site should honor the copyright of the original authors and may not copy or distribute the work further without the permission of the original publisher.
Attend the nwxt Stanford Geothermal Workshop,
click here for details.