2012 U.S. Water Prize Winners Named

Six organizations were awarded this year’s U.S. Water Prize
April 24, 2012
3 min read

Commemorating Earth day, the Clean Water America Alliance presented six organizations the 2012 U.S. Water Prize in a ceremony attended by 300 U.S. water leaders.

Those honored include Pepsico Frito-Lay, Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District, Philadelphia Water Department, Project Wet Foundation, San Francisco Public Utilities Commission and Salmon Falls Watershed Collaborative. 

Cross agency interest and enthusiasm for the U.S. Water Prize were reflected in the panel of keynote speakers that included Anne Castle, assistant secretary for water and science, U.S. Department of the Interior; Nancy Stoner, acting assistant administrator for water, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; and Ann Mills, deputy under secretary for natural resources and environment, U.S. Department of Agriculture. 

The Alliance distinguished each of the winner’s accomplishments:

Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District is embracing innovation and collaboration to reduce pollution throughout the 411 square mile metropolitan watershed.  They're pursuing a pilot project for watershed-based permitting, and possibly trading, within watersheds of two rivers, to reduce phosphorus pollution in the most effective and efficient way possible, tailoring priorities among diverse interests and stakeholders and continuing to integrate green and gray infrastructure.

Pepsico Frito-Lay is instilling a corporate culture of water conservation and reuse to save water, energy and money. As one example, a Frito-Lay chip-making facility in Casa Grande Arizona is reducing its water footprint by cleaning and reusing process water, leaving more for citizens and ecosystems in a thirsty region. A 700,000 gallon-per-day system recycles process water and treats it to drinking water standards for various uses within the plant, saving up to 100 million gallons of fresh water per year that would otherwise be withdrawn from the region's aquifer.

Philadelphia Water Department’s "Green City, Clean Waters" program is a national model for sustaining urban watersheds and uniting citizens and businesses. They're committing to "greening" more than 34 percent of the combined sewer area's impervious cover in the coming 25 years, at a total cost of over $2.4 billion. It's winning praise from regulators, planners and environmentalists because it embraces "triple bottom line" thinking to advance environmental, economic and equity goals with principles of innovation, flexibility and accountability.

Project WET Foundation has created a worldwide water web of students, teachers, trainers and sustainers in 50 states and 56 countries, with no sign of slowing down. Educational and inspirational tools help children of all ages connect to their watersheds, see the worth of water and take action for stewardship and sustainability.

San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is taking to heart the "one water" management theme, using integration and cooperation to reduce urban storm water problems, increase the linkages between energy and water conservation, and build public support for investments in the future, including a $5 billion sewer system improvement program. Regulatory and nonregulatory incentives, public education and workshops will help advance low impact development strategies to reduce coastal and ocean pollution and increase water and energy security.

Salmon Falls Watershed Collaborative consists of agencies and individuals who are joining forces upstream to prevent polluted runoff, conserve forests, and reduce downstream drinking water treatment costs. By connecting the dots between forests and faucets and between private lands and public benefits, this unique interstate partnership involving Maine and New Hampshire and local and federal interests protects source waters and promotes smart growth beyond the borders of political subdivisions and bureaucratic boundaries.

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