Orange County NC Website
13 <br />other partners, and subsequently revised. The revised, peer- reviewed demand projections <br />were approximately 10 -15% lower than the initial projections, as shown by the red shaded <br />boxes in the figure below, and represent an historic consensus among local water system <br />professionals about the present status and long -term needs of the Triangle Region's water <br />supply resources. <br />4.111 <br />Oill <br />0 <br />c� <br />250 <br />a <br />E <br />0 200 <br />E <br />1A <br />150 <br />0 100 <br />d <br />a <br />a� <br />50 <br />0 <br />Current Total `- - <br />Regional Supply <br />L _ _ _ <br />2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 <br />i - - Reduction from Initial <br />Apex <br />� Cary <br />Morrisville <br />� Wake Co -RTP South <br />Chatham County N <br />� Durham <br />� Hillsborough <br />� Holly Springs <br />� Orange County <br />OWASA <br />� Pittsboro <br />� Raleigh &Merger Partners <br />Sanford <br />Current Supply <br />Figure 2. Regional demand projections, current supply, and reductions due to peer review. <br />Each water system's need is presented as the average day demand minus the operational yield <br />of its existing water supply sources (including existing Level 1 and Level //Jordan Lake <br />allocations). Based on demand projections and existing supply, the need for each partner was <br />computed for the 2010 -2060 planning period at five year intervals as shown in Table 1. The <br />italicized columns for 2045 and 2060 highlight the key planning years for the Round 4 Jordan <br />Lake Allocation process and the 50 -year TRWSP, respectively. <br />Page 14 Orange County 2014 Jordan Allocation Request <br />