Community Voice Rethinking The Future Of Hawaii’s Fresh Water We have to manage what we have and we need good metrics to navigate the future By Peter Adler / January 12, 2018 Until new technologies and competitive costs drive bigger changes, Hawaii remains dependent on groundwater. Groundwater provides 99 percent of Hawaii’s domestic drinking water and about 50 percent of all the fresh water used in the state. Other than bottled water, there is no recourse for importation. We have to manage what we have and we need good metrics to navigate. The good news is there is no immediate statewide water emergency such as Californians have faced. The even better news is there is a lot of water on the surface, in the ground and surrounding the state. The bad news is our physical supply and allocation needs seem more volatile than we thought and costs will probably rise.
Other than bottled water, there is no recourse for importation in Hawaii. Flickr: Jose Jaf Barring a “Black Swan” event — random and unexpected — Hawaii’s most likely future water crisis will be financial: the investments needed for system upgrades, new source development, improved wastewater management, water recycling, storm water capture and better transmission.