1 / 22

waterdm

Urban Water Demand Trends Conservation and the Future of Residential Water Use. Peter Mayer, P.E. peter.mayer@waterdm.com. www.a4we.org. www.waterdm.com. www.incentware.com. Water Demand Management: Why?. Water shortages Expensive to develop new supplies Climate change.

inge
Download Presentation

waterdm

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Urban Water Demand Trends Conservation and the Future of Residential Water Use Peter Mayer, P.E. peter.mayer@waterdm.com www.a4we.org www.waterdm.com www.incentware.com

  2. Water Demand Management: Why? • Water shortages • Expensive to develop new supplies • Climate change

  3. Demand Management = Serious Business

  4. Drought @2050 vs Notorious Recent Historical Droughts PDSI = Palmer Drought Severity Index PDSI was developed by Wayne Palmer in the 1960s and uses temperature and rainfall information in a formula to determine dryness. 2040-2060 Source: Dr. Martin Hoerling, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory

  5. Greeley Colorado Historic Demand

  6. Utilities are Asking: Where did the demand go? • In 2008 a typical household used ~ 12,000 gallons less than in 1978 (Coomes, P. et. al. 2010). • Significant demand reductions were observed prior to recession. City of Westminster, CO average annual household water use, 2000 – 2010, with trend line

  7. Seattle Public Utilities - 1990

  8. Forecast Without Conservation

  9. Firm Yield in 2013

  10. Forecast With Conservation

  11. 2013

  12. A brief history of demand forecasting in Seattle

  13. Seattle Saved $725 million PV Cost of New Supply $800 Million PV Cost of Conservation: $ 75 Million _______________________________________________________________ NPV : $725 Million

  14. Avg. Annual Use Per SF Home (kgal) Source: Mayer, P. et. al. 2013. Residential End Uses of Water Update. AWWA - ACE, Denver, CO.

  15. 1999 REUWS vs. 2014 REUWSgallons per household per day

  16. 2014 REUWS Update

  17. Homes Meeting Efficiency CriteriaToilet < 2 gal., Clothes washer <30 gal.

  18. How much more conservation? • A lot. • We’re almost…half way there! • New technology • Outdoor efficiency • WaterSense • Leak detection • Advanced metering • Conservation-oriented rates • Customer engagement through data and information

  19. Future Trends • Technological change • Behavioral change • More intense and frequent drought • Water demand management at the retail level

  20. Thank You Peter Mayer, P.E. peter.mayer@waterdm.com

More Related