The Carpinteria Advanced Purification Project (CAPP) will replenish the groundwater basin with purified recycled water, creating a locally-controlled, drought-resistant drinking water supply.

Home page of Carpinteria Valley Water District website Home page of Carpinteria Sanitary website A collaborative effort to replenish our groundwater

Funding Efforts to Date

Funding Efforts to Date

  • The District has been pursuing grant funding and low-interest financing for CAPP since the project was initially developed in 2016. In 2022 and 2023, the District was awarded $26 million in grant funding from state and federal sources, including State Water Resources Control Board ($15.0 million), United States Bureau of Reclamation ($9.7 million), and California Department of Water Resources ($1.1 million for two different grants). The District intends to pursue additional state and federal grant funds.
  • Additionally, the District submitted a low-interest State Revolving Fund (SRF) loan application to the State in 2019 and was added to the eligible projects list in 2020. In early 2023, the District cleared environmental requirements for the loan and is now finalizing a loan agreement.
  • The District is also currently negotiating grant and loan agreements with each funding agency and expects to have all sources in place by early 2024.

Water Supply Update

Water Supply Update

Over the past few decades, the District and our customers have seen just how unpredictable our surface water supplies are during times of drought, with our State Water Project and Lake Cachuma allocations becoming extremely variable and unreliable. When faced with limited surface water, we have become highly dependent on pumping groundwater from the Carpinteria Groundwater Basin to deliver water to your tap. However, groundwater takes years to recharge and requires steady and consistent winter rain which is never guaranteed.

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Why is CAPP Needed?

Over the past few decades, the Carpinteria Valley Water District (CVWD) and our customers have seen just how unpredictable our surface water supplies are during times of continuing and historic drought, due to our State Water Project and Lake Cachuma allocations becoming extremely variable and unreliable. When faced with limited surface water, we have become highly dependent on pumping groundwater from the Carpinteria Groundwater Basin to deliver water to your tap. However, groundwater takes years to recharge and requires steady and consistent winter rain which is never guaranteed. CAPP will create a solution that provides us with a locally managed and controlled water supply every day, including during times of prolonged drought and water supply shortages.

The amount of water available during average, dry and wet weather conditions by supply source to meet demand of 4,030 acre feet per year by 2030.
During dry conditions, Carpinteria faces a shortfall of 1165 acre feet per year--over 29% of total customer water needs.

How Will CAPP Work?

CAPP is an “indirect potable reuse” project that involves taking water that has already been cleaned at the Carpinteria Sanitary District (CSD) Wastewater Treatment Plant, purifying it in a newly-constructed Advanced Water Purification Facility, then delivering it through a pipeline to injection wells for storage in the groundwater basin. The project could ultimately provide up to 1.3 million gallons of water per day for storage in the Carpinteria Valley Groundwater Basin – enough to meet over a quarter of CVWD’s water needs. Currently, this valuable resource is treated at CSD’s existing plant and discharged to the Pacific Ocean.

CAPP schematic showing wastewater traveling from homes and businesses to wastewater treatment plant, Advanced Purification Facility, new injection wells pipeline and extraction well.

What is Groundwater Replenishment?

Groundwater is water from precipitation that naturally percolates and is stored underground in the soil or in cracks and crevices between rocks. Once recycled water has been purified to meet or exceed drinking water standards, it will be injected into the ground through wells where it will blend with existing groundwater and to replenish or “refill” the groundwater basin. The blended water will sit for several months before it is pumped out and cleaned one last time before being added to the distribution system. The groundwater in the Carpinteria Valley has been depleted in the recent and recurring droughts, straining one of Carpinteria’s major water supplies. By replenishing the groundwater basin with water that can be used for drinking, residents and businesses in Carpinteria will have a reliable, renewable supply of water for generations to come.
What is Advanced Water Purification?

Advanced Water Purification describes proven, multi-step processes that purify water which has already been cleaned at a wastewater treatment plant. The advanced purification process uses a multi-step treatment process including membrane filtration, reverse osmosis, and ultraviolet/advanced oxidation resulting in water that is pure to replenish the groundwater basin. This system of scientifically proven technology is being used throughout California and the United States.

For more information about water reuse and the different processes and uses, visit the WateReuse Association website at www.athirstyplanet.com.

The Advanced Purification Process showing the stages of treatment followed by groundwater injection.

Who's Participating?

Carpinteria Valley Water District, Carpinteria Sanitary District, and the City of Carpinteria have worked closely together to find efficient and affordable solutions to ensure a sustainable water supply for Carpinteria.

The Carpinteria Advanced Purification Project is a result of this teamwork and is one of many efforts – including continued focus on conservation – to offset declining water resources.

Project Timeline

The Carpinteria Valley Water District and Carpinteria Sanitary District are now moving forward with final design and permitting of the project. This phase of work will continue through 2024. The plan is to have CAPP operational by the end of 2026 to provide supply to meet roughly one quarter of the annual water demands and build up groundwater storage to ensure the community of Carpinteria is better prepared for the next extended drought.

CAPP Project Timeline beginning 2016 through projected end in 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions