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WATER WORLD
Oklahoma City nabs $617M to upgrade water utility for Tinker AFB
by Christen Mccurdy
Washington DC (UPI) Aug 25, 2020

The Defense Logistics Agency awarded Oklahoma City Water Utilities Trust a $617.5 million contract Tuesday for ownership, operation and maintenance of the water and wastewater utility systems at Oklahoma's Tinker Air Force Base, according to the Pentagon.

The 50-year deal was a sole-source acquisition, using a justification in U.S. code that exempts government contracts from typical competition requirements if the property or services needed are available only from one responsible source.

Earlier this month Oklahoma City officials authorized the city's Water Utilities Trust and the city attorney's office to finalize a draft contract with the federal government to modernize the base's aging water and sewer systems.

At the time The Oklahoman reported that it would cost $130 million over the next 16 years to upgrade the facilities, and the total outlay for upgrades and management would be an estimated $300 million over the 50-year life of the agreement.

Under the agreement, Oklahoma City's utility customers will not subsidize Tinker water service and vice versa, according to Jared Stigge, whose engineering firm has been working on an agreement to update the facilities for several years.

A draft proposal outlining a possible plan for management of Tinker's water dates to 2013.

In March 2017 the Air Force awarded Honeywell with a $243 million contract to reduce energy consumption and costs at Tinker.

That deal included updating wastewater treatment systems as well modernizing manufacturing lines, installing two new 2,000-ton chillers, installing smart meters and LED lighting and decentralizing the steam heating plant to use less energy.

The most recent Environmental Working Group report said tap water from Tinker was in compliance with federal health-based drinking water standards but had high levels of several cancer-causing contaminants, including bromodichloromethane, chromium and radium.


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WATER WORLD
Water availability has changed, and humans are to blame
Lecce, Italy (SPX) Aug 25, 2020
Changes in the water cycle have important impacts on ecosystems and human activities. In the context of the current and expected temperature rise due to global warming, it is extremely important to understand the origin and extent of these changes. A recent study published in the journal Nature Geosciences analyses the changes in global average water availability on land - defined by the difference between precipitation and evapotranspiration - eliminating any remaining uncertainties about human r ... read more

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