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The Puerto Rico Aqueducts and Sewers Authority (PRASA; Spanish: Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados de Puerto Rico) is a water company and the government-owned corporation responsible for water quality, management, and supply in Puerto Rico, a US insular area. [1]
Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados: AAA: Public utility: Authority for the Financing of Industrial, Touristic, Educative, Medical, and Environmental Control Facilities: AFITEMECF: Autoridad para el Financiamiento de Facilidades Industriales, Turísticas, Educativas, Médicas y de Control Ambiental: AFICA: Banking: Authority for the ...
2018 PREPA Board of Directors (Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados de Puerto Rico) Role Representation Name Remarks Chairman: Public interest: Eli Díaz Atiencia: Engineer Vice Chairman: Consumer‑elected: Vacant: Secretary: Ex officio: Ralph A. Kreil Rivera: Autoridad de Asesoría Financiera y Agencia Fical de Puerto Rico At-large ...
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Autoridad Reguladora de los Servicios Públicos Instituto Costarricense de Acueductos y Alcantarillados (AyA), municipalities, Empresa de Servicios Públicos de Heredia (ESPH S.A.), Administrative Committees of Rural Water Systems (CAARs) and Administrative Associations of Rural Water and Sanitation Systems (ASADAS), private organizations that ...
The aqueduct and its surrounding buildings were added as the Acueducto de San Juan historic district to the National Register of Historic Places on June 21, 2007. [7] The historic district is composed of a small weir that supplied water from the Piedras River; a valve room; six sedimentation and filtration tanks; an engine room with its carbon deposit; and an employee house.
The Acueducto de Ponce (Ponce Aqueduct), formally Acueducto Alfonso XII, [4] is the name of a historic 2.5-mile [2] gravity-based water supply system in the city of Ponce, Puerto Rico. It was designed in 1875 by Timoteo Luberza and built the following years. [5] This aqueduct was the first modern water distribution system built in Puerto Rico. [6]
A March 2001 enhancement also brought the one outfall from Avenida Hostos to diffuse much further into the Sea than before, to where bay depths are 1,200 feet. The post-improvements study demonstrated conclusively that discharges into the Bay by Autoridad de Acueductos y Alcantarillados did not adversely affect the water quality. [50]