SOLAR FARM WATER DELIVERY FOR PECOS COUNTY, TX
Water Runner delivers bulk water for utility-scale solar farm projects across Pecos County, the Trans-Pecos region, and the I-10 and US-285 corridors of West Texas. Our Midland HQ is roughly 115 miles northeast of Fort Stockton, the county seat, giving crews fast turnarounds on dust control, soil compaction, concrete batching, panel-wash, and commissioning water for remote build sites.
Pecos County Solar Pipeline
Pecos County anchors one of West Texas's most active renewable energy buildouts, with utility-scale solar and wind projects advancing alongside the established Permian and Delaware Basin oil & gas economy. Fort Stockton, the county seat, sits at the I-10/US-285 crossroads, drawing on strong solar resource, available open acreage, and proximity to ERCOT West load-zone transmission. The mix of solar, wind, and oilfield activity creates sustained, year-round demand for bulk water services.
Semi-Arid Trans-Pecos Climate
Pecos County sits in a semi-arid Trans-Pecos climate with persistent wind, low humidity, and significant airborne dust — conditions that drive heavy dust control during civil works and ongoing panel washing post-commissioning. Water sourcing must navigate Pecos River basin allocations and local groundwater conservation districts that manage extraction for agricultural, municipal, and oilfield users.
Home Base — 115 miles northeast
Pecos County is approximately 115 miles southwest of our Midland headquarters via I-10 and US-385 — a daily-run corridor for our fleet. We offer 24/7 availability with same-day mobilization to Fort Stockton, the Trans-Pecos region, and surrounding county sites, with assets staged at Midland for rapid response to commissioning windows, construction-phase water services, and EPC schedule pressure. Tier 1 service positioning for multi-project solar and wind work.
INSIDE THE PECOS COUNTY SOLAR BUILDOUT
Who delivers bulk water to solar farms in Pecos County, TX?
Water Runner LLC is a Midland, TX-based bulk water hauler serving utility-scale solar farm projects in Pecos County and across Pecos County. The company delivers three water grades from one TCEQ-licensed source: potable water for crews, reverse osmosis (RO) water for panel washing, and deionized (DI) water for commissioning. Pecos County sits just 115 miles southwest of our Midland headquarters along I-10/US-285, so service is 24/7 with same-day mobilization to Pecos County area solar sites.
Solar farm water services in Pecos County, TX include:
- Dust control water for civil works and access roads
- Potable water for crews and onsite trailers
- RO water for panel washing and module rinse
- DI water for inverter commissioning and final rinse
- Storage and tank fills (frac tanks, poly tanks, bladders)
Serving Pecos County and Across Texas
Pecos County, TX
Solar farm water delivery for Pecos County projects including Fort Stockton, the Trans-Pecos region, and I-10/US-285 corridor builds. 24/7 dispatch from our Midland HQ for construction, dust control, and panel-wash needs.
ActiveWest Texas
Midland, Odessa, Pecos, Andrews, and surrounding counties. Home base region with 24/7 availability.
ActiveNew Mexico
Southeastern New Mexico and remote solar site builds requiring full water infrastructure from day one.
ServingNationwide
Advanced scheduling and coordinated deployment across the lower 48 for utility-scale solar projects.
Planned DeploymentWhat We Deliver to Pecos County Solar Projects
Four services that cover the full life of a utility-scale solar farm, from groundbreaking through 30-plus years of operations.
Dust Control Water
Scheduled and on-call bulk water delivery for grading, haul roads, and active construction zones. Keeps your site compliant and your neighbors happy.
Crew Drinking Water
TCEQ-source potable water for trailers, break stations, and safety stations. Scales from one tank to many as your headcount grows.
Panel Wash Water
RO and DI water for routine cleaning, commissioning, and post-storm recovery. Two delivery options to fit your wash crew's setup.
Storage and Specialty
Bulk storage tanks for rent or purchase, plus water for concrete work, fire-watch refills, and revegetation seeding.
Why Pecos County Solar Projects Choose Water Runner
A water vendor that already understands remote energy sites, regulatory paperwork, and the pace of construction.
One Vendor, Every Water Type
Stop juggling three suppliers. One purchase order, one point of contact, one source of documentation across your whole project.
Built for Texas Energy Work
Operating since 1997 from the Permian Basin. Our drivers know remote sites, lease roads, and the rhythm of construction schedules.
Documentation You Can Audit
TCEQ-licensed source, USDOT-registered carrier, lab tests on potable deliveries, and load tickets with every drop. Everything goes straight into your safety binder.
Pecos County Solar Farm Water FAQs
Does Water Runner serve solar projects in Pecos County?
Yes. Water Runner serves utility-scale solar and wind projects throughout Pecos County, including Fort Stockton, the Trans-Pecos region, and the I-10/US-285 corridor across the broader West Texas renewable energy zone. Pecos County is approximately 115 miles southwest of our Midland, TX headquarters along I-10 — a daily-run corridor that supports 24/7 dispatch with same-day mobilization for construction, dust control, panel-wash, and commissioning needs.
What types of water does Water Runner deliver for solar farm projects?
We deliver three water grades from one TCEQ-licensed source: potable water for crew supply and safety stations, reverse osmosis (RO) water for general panel washing and as feed water for on-site DI polishing rigs, and deionized (DI) water for commissioning washes and high-purity O&M cleaning. All three grades are available from a single point of contact.
When should we engage a water vendor for our solar farm project?
Engage Water Runner before mobilization day, ideally 60 to 180 days ahead of ground-break. Procurement teams use this lead time to onboard us as an approved vendor, validate insurance and credentials, and lock in volume-tiered terms. EPC superintendents and O&M asset managers can also reach us on shorter notice for surge needs, including post-storm wash campaigns and emergency response.
Does Water Runner provide documentation for our QA/QC and SWPPP binders?
Yes. Every delivery includes a load ticket with source, volume, date, and water grade. Potable deliveries include a water-quality lab test. SWPPP-compatible delivery tickets are formatted to drop directly into your BMP documentation binder, supporting EPA NPDES, TCEQ, OSHA 1926.51, and ANSI Z358.1 reporting requirements.
What is the Rapid Fill RO System and when is it available?
The Rapid Fill RO System is a dual-stage, high-recovery reverse osmosis plant built for high-volume panel wash and commissioning campaigns. It produces 300 to 400 GPM on-site (300 GPM primary plus 100 GPM secondary on the reject stream), reducing waste water discharge volume compared to single-pass RO. The system launches in Summer 2026, with pre-launch registration open now for priority scheduling.
Get Water Supply for Your Pecos County Solar Farm Project
Tell us about your Pecos County solar project. Request a Quote and a real person on our team will respond within one business day with availability, coverage details, and next steps.
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