

Thank you for Subscribing to Environmental Business Review Weekly Brief
With the goal of greater sustainability, Tucson Electric Power Company (TEP) is taking steps to conserve as much water as possible in our power generation operations, as well as throughout its office facilities and grounds. Water is a precious resource in the Sonoran Desert, so everything our electric company can do to reduce our water consumption makes good sense from both an environmental and business perspective.
In late June, TEP submitted a bold Integrated Resource Plan to state regulators that calls for more than 70 percent of its power to be derived from wind and solar resources, and an 80 percent reduction of carbon emissions by 2035. TEP will achieve this with the eventual retirement of two units at our Springerville Generating Station in 2027 and 2032, and our coal-fired units at Four Corners Power Plant and San Juan Generating Station. Our cleaner, greener energy portfolio also will reduce surface and groundwater use by 70 percent over the next 7-12 years. The company’s steam-operated fossil fuel plants boil water to create steam that drives turbines to create electric energy. This steam is then collected and sent through a condenser that circulates cool water through pipes to convert the steam back into water. The process repeats many times for the generation of electricity, but TEP attempts to use and recycle every drop of water to the fullest extent. At TEP’s H. Wilson Sundt Generating Station in Tucson, for example, water from waste sumps is recycled seven times for use in the cooling towers, explained Dylan Bearce, Director of Tucson Power Production.“We do everything we can to take our condensed water and storm water and use it in our processes. We also repair leaks quickly and adhere to good maintenance practices to reduce water use,” he said.Our cleaner, greener energy portfolio also will reduce surface and groundwater use by 70 percent over the next 7-12 years