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Evaluating the Water Savings from Irrigation Efficiency Upgrades

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Title: Evaluating the Water Savings from Irrigation Efficiency Upgrades


1
Evaluating the Water Savings from Irrigation
Efficiency Upgrades
  • Jenna Smith
  • Seattle Public Utilities and the Saving Water
    Partnership

2
How much water can be saved?
  • Very difficult to evaluate landscape or
    irrigation measures to determine how much water
    can be saved per measure, but

3
What we do know
  • Typical customers landscape management practices
    shows great potential for water savings
  • Irrigation typically wastes between 30 and 50
  • Total water use for a customer segment can be
    tracked

4
Where does waste occur (everywhere!)
  • Poor design
  • Poor installation
  • Poor management (base schedules and adjusting for
    ET)
  • Poor maintenance
  • Inherently inefficient

5
Approach toDeveloping, tracking and reporting
on irrigation water conservation initiatives
6
Holistic and Comprehensive
  • Target all inefficiencies
  • Hardware and behavior measures
  • Start with biggest opportunities
  • Target all stakeholders
  • Customers start with biggest opportunities
  • Contractors
  • Distributors
  • Professional organizations
  • Target all landscape utility resources
  • Water, solid waste, water quality

7
Use Best-Guess Estimated Method combined with and
Benchmarking and Tracking Determine how much
irrigation and landscape water conservation
measures save using the
8
Best-Guess
  • Gather information from irrigation labs and
    customers
  • Estimate water savings for per measure savings
    theoretically (only way to hold all other
    variable constant) but based on as much real
    world data as possible
  • Example Rain Sensors

9
Best-Guess
  • Develop water savings goals based on
    participation potential and long-term goals
  • Use water savings estimates as an accounting tool
    and only report the aggregate

10
Benchmark Track
  • customer and contractor behaviors
  • irrigation market indicators
  • aggregate water use

11
Benchmark Track
  • Collect information about customer behaviors and
    issue
  • Measure the change in behaviors and attitudes
    through surveys
  • Focus program initiatives on the barriers or
    issues identified in surveys or in depth
    interviews with customers related to irrigation
    inefficiencies
  • Track peak and adjust for weather

12
SWP Water Efficient Irrigation Programs (WEIP)
  • Program Costs
  • 350,000
  • 130,000 for rebates
  • 17,000 for marketing
  • 34,000 for consultants
  • 12,000 for IWMS website
  • 21,000 for conservation tool
  • The rest for staff and training logistics

13
WEIP
  • 1 full time employee (two part-timers)Savings
    Target 125,000 gpd (annual)
  • Rebates for multiple measures typically about
    50 of cost of hardware and installation.

14
WEIP
  • Custom and standard rebates available
  • Cost-analysis model used to determine
    cost-effectiveness of measures
  • Maximum allowable cost per CCF saved

15
Major Findings
  • Survey findings and utility data
  • Over 60 of auto irrigators are in the high
    peak use group
  • 35 use an irrigation specialist to check their
    system once per year

16
  • 73 set their own schedules
  • Customer with automatic irrigation systems water
    more often
  • 4 water their lawn every day or every other day,
    compared with 5 of non-auto irrigators
  • 41 water their garden every day or every other
    day, compared to 19 of those without an auto
    irrigation system

17
  • More water savings per customer opportunities
    from commercial and multifamily than
    single-family residential
  • However, total residential water use is higher
    than commercial and multifamily combined

18
Qualitative and Program Research
  • Design program initiatives with input from
    industry
  • Contractors are the best marketing tool for
    rebates and conservation tool.
  • Audits not cost-effective too much time
    required for too few savings, customers may not
    implement measures

19
  • Poor scheduling
  • inexpensive for customers but not necessarily for
    the utility
  • Everything watered for the same amount of time
  • Not taking advantage of features on controllers
    (multiple start-times)
  • Not adjusting schedules to changing plant water
    need (ET)
  • Contractors and customers do not understand how
    to program smart controllers

20
  • Easier to administer standard rebates than custom
    ones but accounting for savings more difficult

21
Opportunities to count savings
  • Hardware upgrade or add irrigation technology
    that saves water
  • Tune-up fix leaks and fine-tune system
  • Scheduling input water efficient schedules

22
Use whats out there
  • Borrow as much as you can from other utilities
  • SWAT irrigation.org
  • Irrigation Water Management Society iwms.org
  • Center for Irrigation Technology
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