The internet is flooded with articles on homeowner water conservation, yet why do so many water utility attempts to educate customers seem to fall on deaf ears? Perhaps the problem is not as much about educating people on what to do (water-saving checklists and guidelines) as it is about motivating them on why to do it (personal reward). Consider it to be more a case of attitude adjustment than enlightenment.
Carrot Vs. Stick — Why Not Use Both?
Except for times of drastic water shortages — when people are concerned about the possibility of no water coming out of their faucet — it can be hard to get consumer attention. If there is no immediate perceived threat of water scarcity, threats of gloom and doom tend to fall on deaf ears. But that’s not to say water utilities should give up completely.
Part of the problem is that, short of a huge cash penalty, people perceive relatively little tangible reward for water conservation. For someone paying $40 per month on their water bill, cutting consumption by as much as 25 percent yields only about $10 in monthly savings. That means you’ll need to try creative ways to get people to pay attention to water consumption habits, by hitting them when they are most aware or vulnerable.
Show Them The Money!
One particularly personal focus to drive the point home is being able to identify obvious leaks and quantify just how much they are personally costing an individual homeowner over the course of a year. One way to do this is with timely data from an AMI system that uses highly accurate meters to chart low-level consumption during the overnight hours when no water use should be registering.
Whether that means actively notifying individual customers directly, or simply letting them monitor their own accounts through an online portal, it’s a great way to show them just how much skin they have in the game.
Even utilities that do not yet use AMI can simply remind customers to check their water meters before and after a vacation, overnight, or any other time period when they know they should not be consuming water. Calculating the loss per hour by 8,760 hours per year could be enough to convince them to identify and repair leaking fixtures.
Publicize The Big Picture, Too
If personal conservation incentives don’t seem to generate enough financial motivation, let customers see the big picture of how wasted water impacts the overall utility operating budget. If you routinely publish a “State of the Utility”synopsis as part of an annual report or a periodic newsletter, try relating the utility-wide costs of water loss and non-revenue water (NWR) in terms of how that affects utility rates. Let them know how cutting back on waste and routine use can save hundreds of thousands, even millions, of dollars annually to keep rate increases at bay.
Manage Expectations Right From The Start
Erode Resistance With The Drip Technique
Take every opportunity to wear down customer ambivalence by supplying them with constant reminders about water awareness and conservation on every piece of correspondence and with small banners rotating on your utility website. Drive home the point of how good stewardship of the environment conserves water and saves money with every water-smart practice.
Draw Strength From Numbers
Finally, learning from peer utilities is perhaps one of the quickest ways to effect change within your water system constituency. Take note of how other local water system operators, or water system operators of similar size, have been successful in getting customers to reduce water loss. Most important, improve your chances of replicating their success by trying to understand why their efforts might have worked in the first place.