It doesn’t matter which came first — chickens, eggs, farmers, or consumers. When water scarcity is involved, all parties are interdependent. Limiting agricultural or industrial water use in favor of residential use does a community no good if the local economy cannot support existing jobs, or attract new ones, for its residents. In regions chronically impacted by limited groundwater and surface water options or prolonged drought, sustaining the status quo is no longer sufficient. Something has to change, and that change needs to start with recalibrating consumer and industry attitudes about water.
The Heart Of The Matter
A big part of the problem is that, until now, many of us have been conditioned to expect our taps to deliver a virtually endless supply of clean water at relatively low costs. The simple fact is that most people do not know, much less appreciate, the true value of water.
The residents of Cape Town, South Africa, recently proved how far human beings under extreme duress can go to change their water consumption habits — all the way down to 13.2 gallons per person per day, as compared to Santa Cruz, CA’s state-low consumption rate of 44 gallons per person per day during the 2015 water shortage.
Whatever the volume, human water consumption is only one facet of the solution. Controlling the modern-day Hydra that water scarcity has become will require a much broader perspective — technically and attitudinally.
A Multifaceted Problem Needs A Multipronged Approach
Just as different influences contribute to water scarcity, new and different approaches by water utilities, their customers, and other groundwater/surface water users are needed to mitigate the impacts of water shortages. Water utility management and public relations personnel will need to play just as large a role in this process as engineering and operations personnel currently do.
Obviously, the most comprehensive approach is a complete advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) network solution that lets utilities track all aspects of water use throughout the system, all the way down to individual customer activity. Where that is not practical — due to cost or manpower limitations — there are also simpler solutions that provide growth paths from existing manual meter reading systems up to complete AMI infrastructure.
Even utilities and industries that do not yet use AMI technology can get a better handle on water losses by monitoring flow meters installed at key locations along water distribution mains.
Water utility success in encouraging conservation has been mixed, tending to rise and fall with public perception of an immediate threat. Cape Town’s amazing success when faced with the prospect of taps running dry as the city approached “Day Zero” proves that out. Whether that extends to voluntary conservation steps, revisiting mandatory water restrictions, or favoring residential use over commercial/agricultural use, reeducating the public is an ongoing necessity.
AWWA offers a water conservation communications guide and a wide-ranging public communications toolkit with links to informative articles and checklists of steps for water utilities to take. The Value of Water Campaign and the Alliance for Water Efficiency offer comparable educational resources for water utilities, while the EPA provides guidelines on pricing water services as part of a sustainable water infrastructure.