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Delaware Aqueduct
Reservoirs and watersheds
The Delaware Aqueduct carries water from the 95 sqmi, 49.6 e9USgal watershed using the Rondout, Cannonsville, Neversink and Pepacton reservoirs with the Delaware and Neversink tunnels. (The latter three reservoirs are within the Delaware River watershed. Rondout is considered by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection (NYCDEP) to be part of the Delaware system despite being firmly within the Hudson River watershed.) Combined, the four reservoirs account for 1012 sqmi of watershed and 320.4 e9USgal of capacity, 890 e6USgal of which goes to the city — 50% of daily demand. All this water is fed from the Rondout to West Branch Reservoir in Putnam County (part of the Croton River watershed, which includes the flow of the upstream Boyds Corner Reservoir), then to the Kensico, and Hillview reservoirs in southern Westchester County, before continuing on to distribution within New York City.
Leak problems
Leaks were first discovered in the Delaware Aqueduct in 1988, with water losses up to 36 e6USgal per day. The city took many years to analyze the leak problem and devise a solution. In 2010 it announced a plan for a major repair project.
Repairs
The NYCDEP is building a 2.5 mi Rondout-West Branch Bypass Tunnel beneath the Hudson River, which will allow it to bypass the leak. Construction began in November 2013. "The number's going to be $1.5 billion to do the entire program to make the fix," said Paul Rush, Deputy Commissioner of the NYCDEP. "About two-thirds of it, $1 billion, will actually go into constructing a bypass tunnel around the location with the most significant leakage in Roseton, and to do additional concrete grouting in the Wawarsing section." The new bypass tunnel is the largest construction project in NYCDEP's history. Construction of the tunnel, 500 ft under the Hudson, was completed in 2019. The project involved digging two shafts measuring 700 and 900 ft deep. To complete the repairs, the aqueduct was supposed to shut down temporarily in 2022, but this was postponed. The shutdown was rescheduled for 2024–2025; completion of the project is dependent on potential drought conditions and associated demand levels for water from the Delaware system. The northern section of the tunnel was shut down in September 2024. At the time, the closure was planned to last eight months.
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