Announcements
Recycled oilfield water could aid drought-stricken West Texas
Read The Texas Tribune article
TCEQ Accepts Water from Mexico Under 1944 Treaty
Water to provide much-needed relief to communities in the Rio Grande Valley… Read More
Produced Water Society 35th Annual Conference
February 10-13, 2025 | Join us for a transformative event that will shape the future of energy and water. We invite you to register for the conference, where industry leaders and innovators will converge to share insights and drive collaboration.
More information and registration is available here
New South Texas Water Working Group looking for sustainable water solutions
Read the borderreport.com article
2024 Texas Produced Water Consortium Report to the Texas Legislature
Texas is the New Arizona, and Not in a Good Way
Read the bloomberg.com article.
TWDB approves $10,000,000 to Laguna Madre Water District for seawater desalination plant
Read the Valleycentral.com article.
As the Rio Grande runs dry, South Texas cities look to alternatives for water
Read the Texas Tribune article.
Read: TCEQ’s The Advocate, “For and about small businesses and local governments affected by environmental regulations.”
Enhancing Texas’ Water Supplies
Desalination offers a viable, drought-proof solution to water needs in the Lone Star State.
Nearly 100 inland desalination facilities across Texas produce 138 million gallons of water per day from the 2.7 billion acre-feet of brackish water in our aquifers. Seawater desal is coming soon to Texas along the Gulf Coast—stay tuned. These untapped, dependable waters can free up existing fresh water supplies for other uses and for in-stream flows — starting now and into the future.