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The untapped Water and Energy Efficiency Opportunities in Municipal Water Systems

The untapped Water and Energy Efficiency Opportunities in Municipal Water Systems. Mike Rabe City Energy Strategies Conference 19 - 21 November 2003 Cape Town. Who is the Alliance to Save Energy ?.

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The untapped Water and Energy Efficiency Opportunities in Municipal Water Systems

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  1. The untapped Water and Energy Efficiency Opportunities in Municipal Water Systems Mike Rabe City Energy Strategies Conference 19 - 21 November 2003 Cape Town

  2. Who is the Alliance to Save Energy ? • U.S. based NGO coalition of prominent business, government, environmental and consumer leaders who promote the efficient and clean use of energy worldwide to benefit the environment, economy, and major stakeholders • Expertise in Building, Industrial, International, Financing, Utility, Water and Energy management, Policy, Market Development, and Education sectors • Over 70 Alliance Associates • Alliance runs programmes in many countries around the world

  3. What is the relationship between water and energy? In many water supply systems (water and wastewater), energy represents the single biggest input cost in the final delivered product • Wasted Water = Wasted Energy Resources • Addressing inefficiencies in systems results in substantial water savings and hence also substantial energy savings Therefore substantial quantities of energy can be saved within municipal water systems

  4. What does the Alliance do? • Initiated the ‘Watergy Programme’ in various European countries, Brazil, India, Mexico, and South Africa • Watergy underway as a programme in four S.A. cities, funded by USAID • Helps set up Efficiency Management teams • Assists in accessing financial resources • Co-manages the implementation of technical improvements to water systems • Disseminates best practice through case studies

  5. What does the Alliance plan to do in South Africa? • Leak reduction programmes • Pressure Management • Planning and setting up Energy Efficiency cells • Biogas utilization • Water audits and benchmarking, in Buffalo City, Mogale City, Sol Plaatje and Polokwane

  6. What are the challenges to this programme? • Lack of information • Lack of capacity • Lack of financial resource

  7. Context within S.A. • Much change within municipal environment over the last 10 years • Focus on many issues except perhaps efficiency • Extension of service delivery to low income areas is critically needed but cannot be expanded sufficiently due to constraints on resources =>A solution to this constraint is to create efficiencies within the existing systems

  8. The Solution-Watergy Efficiency

  9. Synergies resulting from co-managing water and energy resources • Reduce Costs • Improve affordability / sustainability • Allows for expansion of service delivery footprint • Cuts Air Pollution • Improve Public Health • Upgrade Water and Energy Services • Minimize Strain on Natural Resources • Reduce or Eliminate Major Capital Investment

  10. What can Municipalities do to Promote Watergy Efficiency? • Create management infrastructure (people aspect, competency and capacity) • Expand bulk water metering and monitoring systems (procedures) • Develop baselines and metrics (benchmarking) • Carry out facility assessments (systems audit) • Establish goals and record success • Develop an action plan for addressing waste • Seek outside assistance • Mobilize community action Management and leadership are key

  11. Supply Side: Addressing leaks low c-value (high friction) for pipes improper system layout system over-design incorrect equipment selection old, outdated equipment Lack of preventative and proactive maintenance Poor reactive maintenance wastage of usable water inefficient pumps and motors, correcting power factors Pressure management Load shifting Supply Side and Demand Side Intervention

  12. Supply Side and Demand Side Intervention (cont.) Demand Side: • Metering, billing and revenue collection • Retrofitting water efficient household appliances including toilets • Industrial water reuse • Leak and water waste reduction • Efficient basin Aerators • Efficient washing appliances • Matching service level provision to affordability • Xeriscaping • Drip Irrigation • Rebate installation programmes

  13. Case Study: Results of a co-ordinated supply and demand side approach to water services in the Kagiso area of Mogale City

  14. Results/Benefits • Substantial water and energy savings • Efficiencies created • Reduced sewage flows • Reduced cost of sewage treatment (quantitative and qualitative) • Increased payment percentages for wet services • Postponement of substantial CAPEX

  15. Another key principle: Efficiency attracts development The case of SAB-Miller in Mogale City: • SAB-Miller represents the single biggest user of water in Mogale City (10% of total) and hence also the single biggest source of revenue from water for the City • Water is the largest input cost into brewing beer • Creating efficiencies=>reduces cost of water to the end-user=>attracts future national expansion in capacity of SAB-Miller

  16. SAVE WATER – DRINK BEER !!!

  17. Industrial Demand Side Approaches • Water Reuse • Austin,Texas is developing an entire piping system for recaptured water to be used in a large variety of industrial and irrigation purposes throughout the city saving 150 million liter per day • California reuses over 160 billion gallons of water for irrigation and industries • eThekwini Municipality has implemented an industrial water reuse project

  18. Demand-Side Action Case of Toronto Canada • Goal- Reduce peak water demand and waste water treatment by 15 (220 million liters per day) percent by 2015 • Motivation- Demand is predicted to outstrip supply in 10-15 years dictating the need for costly infrastructure investments • Process- Created a cross sectional water efficiency team with both demand and supply side expertise

  19. Case of Toronto Canada • Actions • Leak reduction program- reduced 30 million liters per day • Low flow toilet installation program • Horizontal Washing machine program • Industrial capacity buy-back program • Results • Efficiency measures cost 1/3 of building new capacity

  20. Other examples in S.A. • Operation Gcin’amanzi project in Soweto • Khayalitsha pressure management project • eThekwini optimization of water system • Least cost planning as adapted to the Western Highveld ----- keep listening!!!

  21. For More Information Mike Rabe mrabe@jwater.co.za 27 11 416 3015 or Seth Baruch at the Alliance to Save Energy sbaruch@ase.org www.ase.org

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