Dewa upgrades water infra with pioneering world-class projects

Dubai / WAM

Dubai Electricity and Water
Authority (Dewa) continues to develop world-class infrastructure, supported by assets that exceed AED182 billion owned by Dewa and its subsidiaries, and around AED86 billion of investments in the energy and water sectors over five years.
This helps Dewa enhance its production capacity to meet the growing demand and provide its services to more than one million customers according to the highest standards of quality, availability, reliability, and efficiency.

Water desalination plants
Dewa currently has 43 Multi-Stage Flash (MSF) water desalination units with a total production capacity of 445 million imperial gallons per day (MIGD) of water at the D, E, G, K, L, and M-Stations. It also has a Sea Water Reverse Osmosis (SWRO) plant with a production capacity of 25 MIGD. Dewa’s total production capacity of desalinated water is 470 MIGD. The water desalination units are located at the Jebel Ali Power Plant and Desalination Complex, which is one of the main pillars that provides Dubai with reliable, efficient, and high-quality electricity and water services.

Reverse-Osmosis water desalination technology
Dewa aims to increase its SWRO production capacity to 305 MIGD by 2030, reaching 41 percent instead of its current share of five percent. The desalinated water production capacity will reach 750 MIGD in 2030. SWRO desalination units require less energy than MSF. One of Dewa’s projects using this technology is at the Jebel Ali
K-Station.
The project, with a production capacity of 40 MIGD and investments worth AED897 million, is scheduled for operation in Q1 of 2021.

The Independent Water Producer (IWP) model
Dewa has achieved a new world’s breaking record for the lowest water levelised tariff of $0.277 per cubic metre for its 120 MIGD Hassyan SWRO Plant. The project is Dewa’s first
Independent Water Producer (IWP) model project. Dewa will
commission the project in 2024.

Producing 100% of
desalinated water
by 2030 using a clean
energy mix

By 2030, 100 percent of desalinated water will be produced by a mix of clean energy that uses both renewable energy and waste heat. Dewa’s initiative of decoupling water production and electricity generation uses a mix of clean energy, comprising of solar power and waste heat.

Storing desalinated water in a subterranean basin
Dewa is building a subterranean water basin to store 6,000 million gallons of water that can be retrieved when needed.
This will provide the emirate with a strategic reserve of over 50 million gallons of water per day in emergencies while ensuring the quality of the stored water remains unaffected by
external factors.

Measuring water quality
Dewa ensures desalinated water quality through continuous monitoring across all stages of the desalination process. This ensures customers have access to drinking water that meets the highest international standards including that of the World Health Organisation for producing, transmitting and distributing drinking water.

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