Friday, July 26, 2024
Authors Posts by IEUA

Inland Empire Utilities Agency (IEUA/Agency) is a regional wastewater treatment agency and wholesale distributor of imported water. Today, the Agency is responsible for serving approximately 870,000 people over 242 square miles in western San Bernardino County.

The Agency is focused on providing three key services: (1) treating wastewater, developing recycled water, local water resources, and conservation programs to reduce the region’s dependence on imported water supplies and drought-proof the service area; (2) converting biosolids and waste products into a high-quality compost made from recycled materials; and (3) generating electrical energy from renewable sources.

Contact:

Phone: (909) 993-1600
Fax:(909) 993-1985

IEUAwater

Inland Empire Utilities Agency Receives a Trifecta of Grand Prize Awards for the Regional...

The American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists® (AAEES) presented the Inland Empire Utilities Agency (IEUA/Agency) grand prize awards in three categories for the Regional Water Recycling Plant No. 5 Battery Storage Project at the annual awards luncheon held on April 13, 2017, at the National Press Club in Washington, DC

Inland Empire Utilities Agency Launches Advanced Energy Storage System to take on Water-Energy Nexus

The Inland Empire Utilities Agency (IEUA) and Advanced Microgrid Solutions (AMS) will host a dedication event for their landmark water-energy project on October 20 at 11:00 a.m. The project is the first-of-its-kind to integrate renewable resources and energy storage at a public water agency. The system uses Tesla battery technology to integrate solar, wind, biogas and grid resources in order to optimize renewable generation, reduce demand on the electric grid and lower energy costs.

Business Real Estate Press Releases

All-in-One White Paper - Delta

Delta Media issues first real estate White Paper on all-in-one platforms

Real estate’s technology landscape is cluttered and fragmented. Standalone tools meant to simplify agents' lives instead have become an obstacle to growth and productivity. As brokerages