Fairhope Water System Capacity Examined

Demands on the Fairhope water system will continue to increase and exceed the current capacity in a few years, according to a report on the system. Gulf Coast Media quoted Caleb Leach of Krebs Engineering, the company that worked on the study, that the average demand for the system is expected to be 13 million-16 million gallons per day by 2033. The city now has a well capacity of 11 million gallons a day and a treatment capacity of 8.5 million gallons per day. "When you start looking at this 10-year period and the number of additional wells that need to be developed to stay in that envelope, you’ve got to start planning for it now," Leach said. "You’ve got to start looking for sites." He also recommended that officials continue to develop plans to study increases in demand and plan to improve the system, including considering new wells at Treatment Plants 1 and 3, drilling to a deeper aquifer at Treatment Plant 4 and creating a hydraulic model and water supply study to prepare to deal with increases in demands. Improvements to increase capacity are planned, with work at Treatment Plant 3 to increase its capacity from 1.5 million to 3.6 million gallons per day to be completed in summer 2024.

Read More

BBN-fallback

Oakworth Named A Best Workplace

CITY OF FOLEY ADDS OFFICE SPACE

City Of Foley Adds Office Space

ARTYS AWARDS NOMINATIONS OPEN

Artys Awards Nominations Open

BALDWIN COUNTY NOVEMBER 2024 HOUSING REPORT

Baldwin County November 2024 Housing Report

MARYVALE PLACE OPENS IN MOBILE

Maryvale Place Opens In Mobile

New exhibit at carnival museum

New Exhibit At Carnival Museum

TICKETS ON SALE FOR KING CAKE-OFF

Tickets On Sale For King Cake-Off

AUSTAL’S SPENCER VISITS MOBILE, SPEAKS ON FUTURE

Austal’s Spencer Visits Mobile, Speaks On Future

BISHOP STATE APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM COMES TO AMNS

Bishop State Apprenticeship Program Comes To AM/NS

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Sign up here for free to get Bay Business News email newsletter every Friday.

By subscribing, you agree to our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement.

Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Sign up here for free to get Bay Business News email newsletter every Friday.

Please enter a valid email address.
Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.