Before a drop of treated water in California ever reaches a consumer鈥檚 faucet, about 8% of it has already been wasted due to leaks in the delivery system. Nationally, the waste is even higher, at 17%. This represents an untapped opportunity for water savings, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.
, published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, is the first large-scale assessment of utility-level water loss in the United States. It found that leak reduction by utilities can be the most cost-effective tool in an urban water manager鈥檚 toolkit, provided utility-specific approaches are used.
鈥淲hen I first heard about 鈥榣eaks鈥 I thought it sounded boring, but leaks are a huge component of our water systems and have a larger opportunity than many other water-saving methods to make an impact,鈥 said lead author Amanda Rupiper, a postdoctoral scholar with the 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Center for Water-Energy Efficiency. 鈥淎s one of the first states to regulate its water losses, a lot of eyes are watching California, and this is an opportunity to impact policy here and elsewhere.鈥
Amid a multiyear drought, the passage of Senate Bill 555 in 2015 made California among the first in the nation and world to require water utilities to regulate their water losses.
Be specific
Using data from more than 800 utilities across California, Georgia, Tennessee and Texas, the authors characterized water losses across the country. They developed a model to assess the economically efficient level of losses, and used that model to compare various water loss regulations and modeling approaches.
The study found that one-size-fits-all approaches to leak management are not effective, economical or equitable for utilities, which vary in size and resources. Uniform approaches could lead to the mismanagement of urban water losses. However, applying utility-specific performance standards can deliver a similar amount of water savings at a profit for both utilities and society.
鈥淩egulations that impose a uniform standard across all utilities will result in water reductions that are too stringent in some cases, too relaxed in others, and too costly overall,鈥 the paper concludes.
Saving drips without draining utilities
Ideally, no leaks would occur in a system. However, while some leaks are obvious and accessible, others can be harder and more cost-prohibitive for some utilities to find and repair. The authors鈥 model assessed when utilities could save the most water for their dollar to find and fix leaks in the system.
They found that for the median utility, it is economically efficient to reduce water losses by 34.7%, or 100 acre-feet per year. The median cost of water savings from leak management is $277 per acre-foot 鈥 cheaper than most traditional water management tools, including conservation campaigns and rebate programs.
鈥淚t鈥檚 cost-competitive to do this and should be part of the profile of how we manage our water,鈥 Rupiper said. 鈥We tend to think of leaks as being a little drip, but leaks are not inconsequential. Drips add up to big flows, and we can鈥檛 ignore them anymore.鈥
The study鈥檚 co-authors include Frank Loge, Joakim Weill and Katrina Jessoe of 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis, and Ellen Bruno of 澳门六合彩资料库 Berkeley.
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Amanda Rupiper, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Center for Water-Energy Efficiency, arupiper@ucdavis.edu
- Kat Kerlin, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu