Elements 2009

Facing Long-Term Drought

The Wests water efficiency pioneers talk about their philosophy regarding the relationship between water conservation and drought response strategies.

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By Penelope B. Grenoble

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To solve the problem, Dickinson recommends capitalizing conservation, to which Dietemann agrees. “In Seattle,” Dietemann says, “we’ve been producing water savings at a little less than half the cost of new sources of supply, and approximately three quarters of our annual $5 million water conservation program is capitalized, meaning that we sell long-term bonds to pay for our conservation activities. This spreads the cost of water efficiency out over future ratepayers the same way we’d do if we were going to go out and drill some wells. Debt financing also helps conservation escape some of the fluctuations associated with annual operating income.”

In Cary, NC, just west of Raleigh, Water Conservation Coordinator Mary Cefalo has taken a page from The Book of the West. “One of the benefits of having an established comprehensive conservation program, is that if we have to quickly change our demand because of drought, we already have the staff, the ordinances, the infrastructure, and a very responsive citizenry,” she says. “All of which means we don’t have to turn the ship on a dime.”

Bennett also shares what’s being done in southern Nevada, “Ninety percent of the water consumed in southern Nevada comes from the Colorado River under an agreement that allows us to borrow river water for indoor use,” he says. “We use it, clean it, and return it to the river. So, our focus has been on consumptive uses such as water features, landscaping, and swimming pools.

“The fact is, we are pretty efficient indoors, because Las Vegas has grown so quickly that two-thirds of our community has been built since water efficiency standards were implemented in the 1990s. So, outdoor water use is a target, and, far from damaging the landscaping industry, it has invigorated it. We have put millions of dollars in incentive money into the programs that heighten people’s awareness that their 30-year-old landscaping is obsolete and needs to be replaced.”

Photo: Colehour & Cohen
Benjamin H. Grumbles, EPA’s Assistant Administrator for Water, and Al Dietemann, stand in front of a WaterSense-labeled toilet.

Without a doubt, landscaping is a target throughout the West. SNWA allows customers to choose their watering days during summer months, but restricts watering to three days a week in the fall when people tend to over-water (a leftover from summer habits), one day a week during winter, and back to three days a week in the spring. SNWA envisions making these regulations permanent, and has issued a request for proposals for an electronic apparatus that would attach to irrigation controllers and automatically enforce the annual schedule.

All water use regulations are spelled out in service rules. Penalties for noncompliance are added to water bills, which must be paid for service to continue. Enforcement is swift and efficient—every inspection that results in a negative outcome results in a follow-up. First time offenses are $40, and then double for each reoccurring violation. “You have to enforce any ordinance you pass,” Bennett says; “your credibility is at stake.”

Campaigns Produce Awareness
The Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility has targeted long-term water efficiency of 150 gallons per person per day, by 2014. Last year, customers used 165 gallons per capita, a substantial drop from 240 gallons when the program began in 1995. According to Water Conservation Officer Katherine Yuhas, elements of Albuquerque’s successful conservation program include education, aggressive rebate and water waste programs, and effective media campaigns. Albuquerque currently takes all its supply from groundwater, but is looking forward to completion of the Rio Grande Project, which will supply 30 billion of the 32 billions of gallons the utility needs annually. “We project this is a sustainable supply for 40-50 years, even taking into account growth,” Yuhas says. “But, we absolutely need to continue to conserve. Irrigation is approximately 40 percent of our water use each year, and I look at it that, if we were to have a severe drought, that’s 40 percent we could cut.”

Albuquerque has implemented two successful rebate programs that target outdoor use, a xeriscape rebate, for customers who swap out water guzzling yards for a drought-tolerant landscape, and a hardware rebate, to purchase equipment that facilitates water efficiency including rain barrels, MP rotator sprinkler heads, pressure reduction valves, and even soil amendments. The xeriscape rebate has resulted in almost 5.5 million square feet of grass being converted to drought-efficient landscape over the pat 10 years, at a cost to the utility of just under $2 million. The rebates are paid out of the sustainable water fund customers pay into, based on water use. “Albuquerque gets, on average, eight inches of rain a year, so we’re always in a situation of not really having enough,” Yuhas says.

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“Two years ago, in 2006, we enacted drought restrictions on top of our regular conservation program for the first time. Fines for wasting water doubled. The way our rates are structured, customers can use up to three times their winter use during summer months. After that, they incur a surcharge. Enforcement is with water cops, who typically respond to tips called in through our hotline—a strategy that helps make the enforcement program more focused and efficient.”

An additional element of Albuquerque’s drought response is to ratchet up its media campaign. In 2008, the utility will be adding another $200,00 to the $300,000 it typically spends. Messages change, which Yuhas says is critical. “The Flush Rush” (which reminded residents there’s only three years left to change over their toilets, with rebates decreasing annually) was run in the last two months of 2007, and will be repeated in 2008 and 2009. Media messages may be reinforce by billboards, bus signs, and bill inserts. Early in 2007, the utility also mounted an extensive campaign on its landscaping rebates. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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suszysustainable

February 17th, 2010 10:28 AM PT

In fact, Americans need to be made of aware of just how much water goes into all of their daily lives - both in their activities (ie showers, toilets) but in their products as well.

suszysustainable

February 17th, 2010 10:28 AM PT

Hopefully the latest rains and snow won't lull us into thinking we've somehow dodge a bullet. We can still be in a drought situation when the storm drains are over flowing.

traceylynnkelly

February 17th, 2010 9:48 AM PT

Interesting article...we hear all the time the word drought, but come the time water resources are run dry, where will we be then?

watergrrll

February 16th, 2010 9:38 AM PT

I would like to see more articles like this one - drought and resource management obviously go hand in hand.

raindrops

November 7th, 2009 10:17 AM PT

conserve water

raindrops

November 7th, 2009 10:17 AM PT

good article

raindrops

October 22nd, 2009 8:43 PM PT

I just read the article on leaks and when they have to replace all the infastructure that was put in eons ago water rates will skyrocket so get prepared and take matters and your safety into your own hands. Install a cistern from raindrops cisterns as soon as possible. Systems are available and can be installed by the handy home owner. Raindropscisterns.com

raindrops

October 22nd, 2009 8:33 PM PT

I just read the article on leaks and when they have to replace all the infastructure that was put in eons ago water rates will skyrocket so get prepared and take matters and your safety into your own hands. Install a cistern from raindrops cisterns as soon as possible. Systems are available and can be installed by the handy home owner. Raindropscisterns.com

raindrops

October 22nd, 2009 8:03 PM PT

Maybe I missed it but I never saw where Rainwater harvesting was mentioned. Raindrops Cisterns has proven that one of the best ways to conserve water is collect rain water which reduces storm water. It dosen't get any easier.

planner

October 21st, 2009 11:33 AM PT

All the way down to 270 gallons per capita? You've got a long way to go before you can begin to discuss conservation.

edo

March 14th, 2009 11:48 AM PT

The float bulb on the flush valve that holds the valve open on most toilets is in need of discussion. If that float bulb is removed, the flushing only occurs while that handle is depressed. In our home this takes less than a second---about a quart, to clear urine. Thus homes that, in these hard economic times, need not go to the expense of a change out of toilets for the newer low flush units, merely a sharp knife and a steady hand to emasculate the toilets bulb is sufficient.

edo

March 14th, 2009 11:38 AM PT

I spent several years as the USAID regional environmental officer in Africa where droughts are common and devastating. Usually land is given up because either water is no longer available or just too expensive. This may accrue to the increasing cost of pulling water from deeper and deeper groundwater resources or just mining out these resources. The end result sees vast areas laid to waste and exposed to the elements. This sees regional dust storms moving tons of soil into the air and thus across vast areas. This tendency toward dust storms is projected to happen more frequently here in the South West and Sun Belt areas. A return to Dust Bowl days. What is not being discussed here is the longer-term impacts of water scarcity on public health. When we start to look at this area we do, in fact, run into the purchased science and dogma of those who would rather not get into these public health discussions for fear of impacts on profits. Admittedly, this is a complex problem and can be viewed from several perspectives. In discussing water availability one needs to look at wastewater, its processing reuse, byproducts and their ultimate disposal. I will discuss two aspects of wastewater. The first is the need to make better use of reclaimed water (recycled water). But to do so, as a society, we need to carefully understand the costs and those costs include external impacts on public health. One aspect of the public health problem is the current inability of many reclaimed systems to exclude pathogens, their genetic fragments, pharmaceuticals, and emerging contaminants from the final product. There are ample peer reviewed papers in the scientific and medical literature that discuss these negative impacts but that body of literature seems to be lost on those controlling the resource---both industry and the regulatory sectors. The second issue lies with the disposal of solids from wastewater treatment. Again, there are ample data within the peer reviewed literature to alert the responsible parties to public health impacts, but this literature for purposes of politics and profit is mostly ignored. But then we have droughts and the thousands of tons of biosolids applied to thousands of acres for decades leaves pathogens, their genetic information, emerging contaminants in that soil. When this soil lifts in regional dust storms, the results from impacted lungs will likely overwhelm the health care system. The impact on infected lungs through multi-antibiotic resistant pathogens will likely see large portions of the population permanently disabled. In closing, the discussions of water and its availability or lack of availability need to be expanded beyond the classic issues of mere potable supply. Dr Edo McGowan

pfmpfm

March 5th, 2009 10:43 AM PT

People are not afraid to face - DROUGHT - but to face it unafraid they need full open disclosure of all the issues associated with climate change or global warming, not the selected politically correct mantras of the day. For the past 40 years, we have educated Americans only to accept what is essentially purcha$ed $cience ... where the conclusion are reached first, then every attempt is made to secure facts to support our preconceived conclusions. Just give US the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Yes, there will be some trying time in the moment, but the future will be a bright and creative one

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