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Elizabeth Cutright Water Efficiency Editor

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WE Editor's Blog

February 8th, 2010 10:00am PST

One Million Acre-Feet

Posted By Elizabeth Cutright 1 Comment

Last month, Dr. Peter Gleick (President, Pacific Institute) discussed California’s water problems, including the state’s need to come up with an additional 1 million acre-feet of water to fulfill current and future demand. In an article that originally appeared in the San Francisco Chronicle, Gleick does a wonderful job of discussing both California’s successes (25 years of improved water efficiency) and failures (less than 40% of all toilets in the state are low-flow or HET commodes).

Gleick goes on to discuss a series of reports recently completed by the Pacific Institute that “provide a comprehensive statewide analysis of California’s urban and agricultural water needs.” While the reports focus on California, I think the information they contain—including how existing technologies can be harnessed for immediate water efficiency results—is applicable to any community concerned about water resource management.

So how does one community go about finding an additional 1 million acre-feet of water?  The Pacific Institute reports enumerate two effect starting points:

* 400,000 acre-feet of water per year by urban users conserved by replacing inefficient fixtures (toilets, showerheads, commercial spray-rinse nozzles, and washing machines) with their low-flow counterparts.
* The remaining 600,000 acre-feet per year of water can be saved through smart irrigation, regulated deficit irrigation, and converting orchards and vineyards to drip and sprinkler irrigation.

So what do you think? Do you have faith in smart irrigation technologies and low-flow fixtures? And is enough being done to make it easy and economically feasible for communities large and small to embrace these effective water conservation tools?

Click here to read more.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

4greenerfuture

February 15th, 2010 12:13 PM PT

I am perplexed as to why "efficient" solenoid based hot water circulators continue to be overlooked as significant water saving devices. The few studies in the past on hot water circulators were limited to push-button on-demand hot water circulators (devices that only delivered water slightly higher than ambient temperature causing users to still wait for hot water) and low-power low-flow circulators (devices often didn't move the water quick enough to overcome the thermal absorbing properties of long un-insulated pipes). Inadequately designed hot water circulators use either a single check valve or a normally-open thermostatic valve. Both of which do little in preventing water from siphoning into the cold water line from the hot water line during cold water use. As a result, needless demand is repeatedly placed on hot water heaters and cold water users are left wasting water waiting for cold water. With issues like these it's easy to see why only moderate water savings were realized from studies which used inefficient hot water circulators. Of the 5 hot water circulators on the market today only one incorporates solenoid valve technology which eliminates hot water line siphoning, the needless reoccurring demand on the water heater and the long wait for cold water problem previously mentioned. To assume all hot water circulators operate the same is similar to thinking all cars get the same gas mileage. Until industry professionals take a closer look at solenoid based hot water circulators millions of people will continue the daily ritual of wasting water and resources waiting for hot water multiple times a day.

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