Blue Plains Wastewater Facility in Washington DC Reinforces Facility
Against Floods

O epa.gov/arc-x/blue-plains-wastewater-facility-washington-dc-reinforces-facility-against-floods

The District of Columbia's Blue Plains Wastewater
Facility in Washington, DC, serves most of the national
capital area, including parts of Maryland and Virginia.

This facility is vulnerable to flooding because of its
location adjacent to the Potomac River. The facility has
historically been protected from flooding by a seawall
built to withstand a 1 -100 year flood. However,
understanding that storms may become more frequent
and intense, the DC Water and Sewer Authority
decided to implement an adaptation action to prepare
for more flooding due to climate change. The Blue
Plains facility is undergoing a $13 million dollar
construction project, expected completion in 2021, to
build a 17.2 ft high sea wall that will surpass the
recommended 1-500 year storm level by including 3
feet of freeboard to protect against higher river
elevation or wave action. Blue Plains has selected this
standard as a proxy to adapt the facility to expected
higher river elevation and storm surge inundation. This
will help protect the facility against higher river levels
and storm surges and reduce threats of Clean Water
Act violations. Blue Plains took this action to promote resilience to current conditions and adapt to expected climate changes.

How Did They Do It?	Applicable EPA Tools

Blue Plains Identified Facility Vulnerability and Appropriate Adaptation Options

•	Blue Plains acknowledged the scientific uncertainty of how climate change would
impact water levels in the Potomac River. As a major facility with a large
investment along the riverfront, building a seawall to protect against flooding was
deemed a preferable strategy rather than moving the entire facility to higher
ground.

Blue Plains Chose an Adaptation Action That Exceeded Current Best Practices

Account for Future Changes in Climate

•	Blue Plains utilized a proxy measurement to design the seawall to account for
uncertainty regarding how climate change would impact Potomac River levels.

The seawall (currently under construction) was designed to account for a current
expected 1-500 year flood and include 3 feet of freeboard, this design exceeds
FEMA's flood risk standards for federally funded projects.

o FEMAs flood risk standards for federally funded projects
Similar Cases and More Information

Use the Climate Resilience
Evaluation and Awareness Tool
to identify facility vulnerability
and adaptation strategies that
account for climate change.

to The EPA's Adaptation

Strategies Guide can help you
select adaptation strategies
based upon expected facility
vulnerabilities.

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Several other communities have adapted to protect their water and wastewater service from flooding and sea level rise. To see
how another northeastern community analyzed the impact of sea level rise on a water utility, view Manchester-by-the-Sea. For
a community that recognized the prohibitive cost of protecting a highly vulnerable facility and decided to move to a safer
facility, see Iowa City. Protecting the Blue Plains facility is only one of several strategies Washington, D.C. has taken to reduce
the threat of flooding on the community. To see how Washington, D.C. is using green infrastructure to reduce stormwater
impacts and combined sewer overflows view the DC Consent Decree.

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