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Central Valley pool owners face rising costs from evaporation losses

May 12, 2026
Central Valley pool owners face rising costs from evaporation losses

By AI, Created 5:09 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – New analysis says inefficient pool systems in Farmersville and Visalia can waste up to 30% of homeowners’ water and chemical budgets as heat, evaporation and tighter municipal audits raise the cost of upkeep. Local pool service experts say better filtration and chemical balance can help limit waste and protect pool surfaces.

Why it matters: - Central Valley homeowners face a double hit from higher utility costs and stricter water-use oversight. - Pool evaporation and inefficient filtration can drain up to 30% of a maintenance budget in water and chemicals. - Poor chemical balance can also shorten the life of a pool by damaging interior surfaces and finishes.

What happened: - A new analysis of regional climate data says Farmersville and Visalia pool owners are losing money to what it calls an “Evaporation Tax.” - The analysis was released as the Central Valley faces tighter water restrictions and rising utility bills. - Reyes Pool Service in Farmersville tied the problem to high heat, evaporation and inefficient equipment.

The details: - NOAA Central Valley Evaporation Tables show the region’s heat speeds up liquid-to-gas conversion more than in coastal areas. - UC Davis Center for Water-Energy Efficiency research links water loss to higher energy use because filtration systems must work harder as total dissolved solids rise. - California Department of Water Resources Annual Usage Reports are cited as support for the cycle of water loss and increased system strain. - Ricardo Reyes, founder of Reyes Pool Service, said a filtration system running at even 10% lower efficiency can trigger a compounding cycle of chemical waste and water loss. - When water evaporates, the chemicals left behind can prompt homeowners to add more chlorine and acid. - Over-treating a pool in a high-evaporation climate can damage the pool’s interior surface and finish. - Reyes said chemical balance matters for both water clarity and the structural integrity of the pool asset. - Reyes Pool Service says it specializes in high-efficiency filtration management, equipment repair and chemical balancing for the San Joaquin Valley climate.

Between the lines: - The release reframes pool care as an infrastructure cost, not just a seasonal chore. - The message also connects conservation concerns to household budgets, which may resonate more than abstract drought warnings. - Municipal audits make efficiency a compliance issue as well as a cost issue.

What’s next: - Homeowners in the Central Valley may look for more efficient pumps, filters and chemical management to reduce evaporation-related losses. - Local pool operators are likely to emphasize climate-specific maintenance as water restrictions continue. - The company is positioning its services around that shift in demand.

The bottom line: - In the Central Valley, pool evaporation is being framed as a hidden but measurable cost that can hit wallets, water use and pool condition at the same time.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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