November-December 2007

Skill and Insight

The potential water saving of low-flow fixtures as documented by the Albuquerque single-family homes case study

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By Andrew Funk

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As the hot water valve is opened, the initial water temperature may be anywhere from 40°F to 120°F or higher. The average preferred showering temperature, though, is 105°F (Gleick et al. 2003). Thus, depending on the plumbing between the shower and the water heater, a significant volume of previously heated water is normally discarded down the drain while waiting for the preferred water temperature. This study estimates that a typical three-person single-family home loses over 1,400 gallons down the drain annually waiting for hot water from the water heater to reach the showerhead. The Shower Water Conservation System eliminates this unnecessary wasting of water and energy resources in the following way. 

When cold/lukewarm water flows through the thermostat, the valve is open and the water is directed to the two reservoirs. When the water reaches 105°F, the thermostat closes and hot water is then redirected toward the showerhead. On its way there it flows through a Venturi. The Venturi’s narrow section is connected to the reservoirs via a one-way check valve. Since pressure is at its least in the Venturi’s narrow section, the stored cold/lukewarm water, with a greater force as a result of gravity and some suction, is injected into the hot stream flow. Here the heat energy of the hot water stream flow thermodynamically reheats and absorbs the cold/lukewarm water. Throughout the shower event the cold/lukewarm water is injected at a rate that has a negligible impact on the shower water temperature. Therefore, individual showering events may occur without wasting the initial (previously heated) cold/lukewarm water and the energy resources consumed for potable treatment, delivery, and end-use water heating and wastewater treatment.  

As with the toilet analysis, the Albuquerque single-family home total per-capita shower water demand was estimated and compared to four different retrofit scenarios. The comparison with this study’s (more conservative) 60% retrofit scenario assumes that 60% of ABCWUA single-family home customers are using the system and 40% are not. Since shower water demands eventually increase over time as population increases, it is important to consider new and innovative solutions that increase efficiency of each showering event.

This study finds that the water saving benefits of the Shower Water Conservation System translate into 291 acre-feet in 2011, 318 acre-feet in 2020, and 344 acre-feet in 2030 of alternative water supply that may be either used to meet current demand each year or stored to meet future years’ demands.

Since this system enhances efficient use of heated water with each showering event, the total electricity and natural gas demand reductions extend beyond those that occur upstream or downstream at the water utility for pumping, drinking-water treatment, and wastewater treatment. Moreover, heating water is highly energy intensive, so the estimates under this study’s 60% retrofit scenario, even though conservative, are noteworthy.

This study estimates that the combined ABCWUA and single-family home electricity demand–reducing potential under the scenario in Figure 8 is 6,606 megawatt-hours in 2011, 7,214 megawatt-hours in 2020, and 7,829 megawatt-hours in 2030. These significant reductions are eight times the electricity demand–reducing potential offered by single-family homes using dual-flush toilets. These reductions lead to fewer demands on thermoelectric power generation and thus lead to less greenhouse gas emissions.

When one considers that about 60% of US households use natural gas water heaters to heat their shower water, it is clear that any innovation that increases hot-water-use efficiency is mutually beneficial to both the water utility and its customers (Wendt, Baskin, and Dufree 2004). Here, the combined ABCWUA and single-family home natural gas savings are estimated at 0.50 million Therms in 2011, 0.55 million Therms in 2020, and 0.59 million Therms in 2030. These savings are 36 times the estimated potential natural gas savings when single-family homes use dual-flush toilets, thus decreasing demand and potentially contributing to fossil fuel and greenhouse gas reduction goals.

Benefits Generate Opportunity
The water-use efficiency estimates presented above demonstrate that there are significant volumes of alternative water supply and energy resource savings possible with current and emerging innovations. But what do those benefits translate into? The answer is opportunity. As Albuquerque (and the US) advances into the 21stcentury, where the ability to meet demands will become increasingly difficult under pressures of drought, climate change, and population growth, it may be possible to maintain a more sustainable water and energy demand, while at the same time acquiring an alternative water supply, thus enhancing water and energy security. 

Looking to the 60% retrofit scenarios presented above and assuming a new scenario where 60% of ABCWUA single-family homes are using the dual-flush toilet and the Shower Water Conservation System, the opportunities generated are substantial. This study found that from 2008 through 2012 the water saved is enough to meet the annual demand of about 11,461 homes. Next Page >

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