OCSD and OCWD Win Award

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OCSD and OCWD Win Award

The Orange County Water District (OCWD) and OCSD received a Silver Mercury Award for their Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS) Bottled Water Campaign. The International Mercury Awards competition honors the best in public relations, public affairs and corporate communications.

The GWRS Bottled Water Campaign spanned a year and included a Hollywood media kick-off event, a California bottled water tour, the GWRS 10th anniversary Winter Fest celebration as thanks for local support, and the garnering of the Guinness World Records™ title for the most wastewater recycled to drinking water in a 24-hour period.

The two agencies collaborated on the creation of the Groundwater Replenishment System (GWRS), the world’s largest advanced water purification project for drinking water. Since it came online in 2008, it has produced 282 billion gallons of near-distilled quality water that was added to the Orange County Groundwater Basin. The water is then pumped by 19 cities and water agencies to supply 77 percent of the water needs for 2.5 million people in north and central Orange County. The GWRS currently produces 100 million gallons per day of water.

“The GWRS Bottled Water Campaign drew tens of thousands of peoples’ attention to state and local water needs and provided knowledge about water reuse as a viable new source of drinking water,” said OCWD President Vicente Sarmiento. “OCWD and OCSD were the first to bottle advanced recycled water in the Western Hemisphere. Since bottling, people from as far away as Spain and England have been able to sample reused water for themselves. The GWRS is paving the way for other projects like it around the world and we believe that support begins with tasting and seeing the water.”

“Educating people that wastewater is a resource is critical to the success of water reuse projects,” said OCSD Chairman David Shawver. “This project has helped Orange County create a reliable water supply and we look forward to the project’s final expansion in 2023, which will bring total water production to 130 million gallons a day—enough water for one million people. At that time, we can proudly say that we have met OCSD’s 100 percent recycling goal.”

The annual International Mercury Award is named for the Roman god who was the messenger of the other gods and symbolizes the spirit of the message communicated. Judging is based on the values of Orange County Water District and Orange County Sanitation District Receive Mercury Award creativity, effectiveness, performance, and success.

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