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BOA Water

BOA Water. Outline. Metering and billing Showers, toilets, faucets and other fixtures Domestic hot water systems Irrigation and sprinklers Landscaping alternatives. Piner Olivet Lifestyle Program. Lifestyle Campaigns students and teachers custodian support Examples Computers off

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BOA Water

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  1. BOA Water

  2. Outline • Metering and billing • Showers, toilets, faucets and other fixtures • Domestic hot water systems • Irrigation and sprinklers • Landscaping alternatives

  3. Piner Olivet Lifestyle Program • Lifestyle Campaigns • students and teachers • custodian support • Examples • Computers off • Lights off • Waste less

  4. Piner Olivet Technical Program • Student technical audits • Building Operator Training • Technical audits • Energy monitoring and savings reports • Building retrofits

  5. Importance of custodian • Focus of Piner Olivet program in schools • Interface between district, teachers and students • Source of technical information • Provides continuity • Knows schools better than anyone • Can produce large savings • Key to Piner Olivet program success

  6. Piner Olivet district update • Lifestyle Program news • Recent events • Upcoming events • Technical Program news

  7. Piner Olivet in your school • Success stories • Areas to improve

  8. Benefits of water conservation • Reduced water and energy use • Higher quality equipment • Less maintenance • Less likely to run out of hot water

  9. Benefits of water conservation • Less chance of losing water pressure • Extended equipment life • Utility rate increases avoided • Positive impact on climate change issues

  10. Water metering • Measured in m3 (cubic metres) or imperial gallons (IGAL) • 1 m3 = 1,000 litres • 1 m3 = 220 IGAL • 1 m3 of water has a mass of 1,000 kg • 1 m3 is 1 m long x 1 m wide x 1 m high

  11. W A T E R 1 m3 of water 1 m 1 m 1 m

  12. Water billing • Combined charges: $1.00 to $1.80 per m3 • Sewage treatment fees: 50% to 80% of water charge • Irrigation systems may have separate meters

  13. Calculating Water Costs • 4 parts to water bill • flat fee for water service • fee based on volume of water used • flat fee for sewer service • sewer fee based on volume of water used

  14. Flat Fee for Water Service • based on diameter of water pipe into building • sample bill: 5/8” or 3/4” pipe: $15.00 1”: $20.00 1.5”: $30.00 2”: $40.00 3”: $70.00 4”: $100.00 6”: $150.00

  15. Fee Based on Volume of Water Used • sample bill First 80,000 gallons: $1.65 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $1.80 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $1.97 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $2.12 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $2.39 per 1000 gallons Above 400,000 gallons: $2.66 per 1000 gallons

  16. Flat Fee for Sewer Service • based on diameter of sewer pipe leaving building • sample bill 4” sewer pipe: $20.00 6”: $70.00 8”: $100.00

  17. Sewage Fee Based on Volume of Water Used • sample bill First 80,000 gallons: $1.58 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $1.73 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $1.88 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $2.04 per 1000 gallons Next 80,000 gallons: $2.29 per 1000 gallons Above 400,000 gallons: $2.54 per 1000 gallons

  18. Water and sewage fees • May be either ascending or descending • Ascending: costs increase as water use increases • Encourages water conservation • Fairly rare • Descending: costs decrease as water use increases

  19. Typical water use • Garden hose (one hour): 1,100 L • Shower (ten minutes): 160 L • Toilet (per flush): 16 to 23 L • School water use • 10 to 15 m3 per student per year

  20. Leaking fixtures • Leaking toilet • 400 L per day ($200/year) • Dripping faucet • 5,000 L per year • Hot water leaks add to heating costs

  21. Leaking fixtures • Use food dyes to check for leaks in tank type toilets • Inspect all fixtures regularly for leaks

  22. Showers • Old style showerhead • 14 to 23 L/minute • Low flow • 9 L/minute • Effective shower with less water

  23. Showers • Efficient showerhead design • Narrower spray cone • Even spray pattern • Less tendency to plug • Self-cleaning

  24. W A T E R Showers Low-flow showerhead

  25. Showers • Automatic shut-off devices • Spring-type • Infrared • Timers • Adjusted and functioning correctly? • 90 seconds for gang-type showers

  26. Toilets: flush-valve • Require regular adjustment • Four-second flush • Adjust volume and pressure • Save water • Reduce flooding • Fewer complaints

  27. W A T E R Toilets Flush-valve toilet

  28. Toilets: tank-type • Old style 16-20 L / flush toilets • Experiment with displacement devices • Toilet dams • Flapper valve early shut-off • Plastic bottle filled with sand • Save 30% on water use • Replace with water-conserving type

  29. W A T E R Toilets Example of a toilet dam

  30. Urinals • Water savings controls: • Timers and solenoid valves • Light-switch interlocks • Infrared sensors • Water shut-off during vacant periods • Appropriate flushing schedule

  31. Urinals • Routine checks • Flushing duration 4 seconds • Leaks and efficient controls operation • Require regular adjustment and maintenance • Water volume

  32. W A T E R Urinals Flush-valve urinals

  33. Faucets • Spring-return and timed devices save water • Routine checks: • Taps not shutting off • 5 second on-time • Replace worn springs and parts • Fix leaks

  34. Faucet aerators • Save 25% of water when rinsing hands or dishes • Flow reduced from 12 to 4 L/minute • Reduces splashing; less cleaning required

  35. W A T E R Sinks A sink without faucet aerators

  36. Hand wash system • Spray system for five or more users • Not efficient for < 5 people: use a faucet instead • Can the flow rate be reduced?

  37. Domestic hot water • High energy use • Set to 60°C or lower: • Natural gas savings • Less chance of burns • Less cold water used for mixing • Is hot water necessary for student hand-washing? • Dishwashers may require hotter water

  38. Domestic hot water • Are the pipes insulated? • Shut off recirculation pumps during vacant periods: • Summer • Other (if no danger of freeze-up)

  39. W A T E R Domestic hot water Domestic hot water system

  40. Domestic hot water • Hot water system may be oversized • Designed to supply showers • Too many hot water heaters • Unnecessary storage tanks

  41. Electric water heating • 5 times more expensive than natural gas • Avoid peak demand periods • Disconnect some heater elements • Reduce voltage • Consider natural gas conversion

  42. Water-cooled equipment • Costly to run • Routine checks: • Water shut off when equipment is off • Water flow rate • Leaks • Consider converting to air-cooled system

  43. Efficient irrigation • Lawns: 2 to 3 cm per week • If grass if green, no watering needed • Adjust timers for efficient water use • Water in early morning or evening • Reduces evaporation • Minimizes sunburn on grass and plants

  44. Sprinklers • Sprinkler heads • Inspect regularly • Replace damaged heads • Clean regularly • Inspect piping for leaks • Correct number of sprinklers • Spray system clear of obstacles

  45. Lawn maintenance • Keep grass trimmed at 6 cm • De-thatch and aerate every two years: • Reduces run-off and evaporation • Increases aeration and water infiltration • Leads to healthier turf

  46. Lawn maintenance • Improve drought Piner Olivetstance by: • Decreasing nitrogen • Increasing potassium • Time-release fertilizer • Avoid over-fertilizing

  47. Landscaping alternatives • Plants suited to local conditions • Drought-Piner Olivetstant perennials • Native ground covers • “Xeriscaping”: possible student project

  48. W A T E R Landscaping alternatives Iris Germanica, a very Piner Olivetlient and drought-tolerant plant

  49. W A T E R Landscaping alternatives Snow in Summer (Cerastium tomentosum) thrives in poor rocky soil

  50. W A T E R Landscaping alternatives Tiger Lily (Lilium lancifolium) is drought- and insect-Piner Olivetstant

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