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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Currently 46% of Albuquerque’s electricity is generated by coal, largely from the closed loop cooling system at the San Juan generating station in the upper Colorado River Basin. Moreover, about 740 gallons of water are used (some of it consumptively) for every megawatt-hour of electricity generated (Power New Mexico 2006a; Power New Mexico 2006b). So, the resultant electricity demand reductions are enough to decrease the volume of water withdrawn from the Colorado River system by 45 acre-feet (Power New Mexico 2006a). Equally important, the electricity demand reductions represent the same amount of electricity annually consumed by 6,107 Albuquerque homes. The natural gas savings generated are enough to meet the annual demand of 3,685 single-family homes.

Continuing with the same aforementioned 60% retrofit scenario and five-year period, the homes using these two innovations collectively save an estimated $7,535,440 (in 2006 dollars, r = 5%). This is money that would likely contribute to other local economies. The ABCWUA would also enjoy monetary benefits of about $299,000. These funds may be used to further improve water conservation programs or other programs that collectively may enable Albuquerque to meet the water resource challenges of drought, climate change, and population growth.

Quantifying the monetary benefits from both water and energy savings, this study emphasizes that new and creative conservation programs, especially those that purchase innovations in bulk (keeping the cost per unit low) and distribute them to homes for free, are highly cost-effective. In addition, distribution programs (rather than rebates) are more likely to produce the level of customer participation necessary to meet demand reduction goals more quickly. External to effective demand reduction policy then is that it is likely water-use efficiency will offset the need for developing or transferring more traditional supplies over long distances, which are often highly energy intensive (US Department of Energy 2006).

The Take-Home Message
Water saving innovations, along with creative retrofit policies, offer the ABCWUA and its customers the opportunity to maintain an alternative water supply to meet current and future demand as well as adapt to cope with the challenges of drought, climate change, and population growth. As with the greater US, Albuquerque’s current water supply is likely to face shortages in the near future as a result of water supply impacts associated with climactic changes and a growing demand. However, the types of innovative solutions examined in this report (and many others) demonstrate a large potential for mitigating adverse impacts to supply.

Current high-efficiency toilets such as the dual-flush toilet offer the water utility and its customers significant savings beyond the status quo water and energy-use reductions experienced since implementation of the 1992 Energy Policy Act and rebate programs. The savings translate into an alternative water supply and energy savings that may be used to meet current and future demand. Moreover, both the ABCWUA and its single-family home customers save money.

The Shower Water Conservation System is a newly emerging innovation that also facilitates water savings. However, since it saves hot (or previously heated) water used in each showering event, considerably more energy resources are conserved. Again the alternative water supply and (to a greater degree) avoided energy consumption offer the opportunity to meet current and future demands, while simultaneously saving money and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

This research demonstrates that there is power in efficient water-use innovations beyond mere water conservation. Water purveyors that do not recognize that power are designing conservation policies under incomplete information. Using water-efficient innovations, as part of a comprehensive planning effort, may enable cities to cost-effectively enhance water and energy security in the 21stcentury. Therefore, it is important that water purveyors understand and take full advantage of the potential benefits associated with existing and newly emerging innovative solutions to water and energy supply challenges.

Aldo Leopold said, “Conservation is a positive exercise of skill and insight” (1949). The message readers should gather from this summary and its larger parent study is the following: If 21st-century water resource managers understand and take full advantage of the types of insights presented in this study and skillfully exploit them within the context of a larger, more comprehensive approach to enhancing water and energy security, then future generations may be more resilient and empowered to cope with the water supply challenges inherent in drought, climate change, and population growth.

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Note
This article is a summary of a professional project report by Andrew Funk, submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of master of water resources at the University of New Mexico. This report was approved by the following graduate committee: Professor of Economics Janie Chermak (co-chair), Professor of Environmental and Water Resources Engineering Julia Coonrod (co-chair), and Anne Watkins, special assistant to the New Mexico state engineer.

The research presented in this article evaluates the potential of innovations, as well as begins to enhance the understanding of their role in 21st-century comprehensive planning. This research, which used the city of Albuquerque as a case study, reflects the findings of Andrew Funk’s graduate research at the University of New Mexico’s Water Resource Program. The breadth of these findings may be downloaded at https://repository.unm.edu/dspace/handle/1928/2589. Note: This material has been copyrighted by the author, and this research material was presented by the author at the Southwest Hydrological Society conference in August 2007.

Author's Bio: Andrew Funk writes from Boulder, CO.

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