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Cutter Lateral Reach 21 Water Treatment Plant: Finding Water in the Desert
Project Information
- Project Location:
- CA
- Status:
- Completed - Jan 2020
- Structure Type:
- Sewage / Water Treatment Plant
Scope Of Work
Water, essential for life, is in short supply in the Four Corners region of the United States. Rapidly depleting and poor-quality groundwater sources are unable to meet current and future demand, resulting in over 40% of Navajo Nation households in the region relying on water hauling to meet their daily needs.
To address this critical resilience and environmental justice issue, Congress authorized $1.5 billion for the Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project (NGWSP) – a large-scale regional water supply scheme that conveys a reliable water supply from the San Juan River to the eastern section of the Navajo Nation, the southwestern portion of the Jicarilla Apache Nation and the city of Gallup, New Mexico.
As a key part of this transformative project, The U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation awarded Jacobs the progressive design-build contract for the design and construction of the Cutter Lateral Reach 21 water treatment plant and related system facilities near Bloomfield, New Mexico.
This innovative plant will treat up to 5.4 million gallons per day of water at full capacity, providing a clean, long-term water source for the Navajo and Jicarilla Apache Nations communities along the Cutter Lateral component of the NGSWP. The project also includes a finished water pump station, 500,000-gallon regulating tank, 7,500 square foot operations and maintenance building and 21,400 feet of pipeline.
The Cutter Lateral Reach 21 project continues Jacobs’ more than 35-year history of partnering with the Bureau of Reclamation on water reuse and treatment projects across the country. It also represents the Bureau of Reclamation’s first water design-build project, which provided the agency with greater confidence that the project would be delivered on schedule and on budget by adopting a highly collaborative procurement model. While there were challenges with the remote location, the changing weather and the COVID-19 pandemic, the team worked more than 500,000 hours with zero lost time during construction. This project was critical to improving living conditions and combating COVID-19 now and in the future.
The team completed the project in 2020. In coordination with the overall NGWSP, it provides a water supply to meet the future population needs of approximately 250,000 people in these communities by 2040.