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Water Demand Management

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Title: Water Demand Management


1
Water Demand Management UNIT 2
Municipal WDM
2
Course map
3
Outcomes
  • By the end of this unit, you should be able to
  • contextualise your MWSA within your countrys
    water supply chain
  • assess the WDM potential for your MWSA and relate
    this to IWRM and sustainable development

4
Outcomes
  • By the end of this unit, you should be able to
  • map or list the nature of water resources,
    consumers, users and demand in your own context
  • list constraints and incentives affecting WDM
    implementation for MWSAs
  • relate these to your own country and situation

5
Outcomes
  • By the end of this unit, you should be able to
  • formulate ideas for exploiting incentives and
    overcoming constraints to WDM implementation
  • understand the successes and challenges of some
    municipal case studies
  • begin to develop your own MWSAs WDM
    implementation plan

6
2.1 What is an MWSA?
  • Typical MWSAs
  • Vary across Southern Africa
  • Are responsible for supply to domestic,
    industrial and commercial users
  • Face rapidly growing demand
  • Are under pressure to provide cheap reliable
    water to more users
  • Have a limited policy-making role

7
2.1 What is an MWSA?
  • Typical MWSAs
  • Operate within a fixed enabling environment
  • Have limited control over water tariffs
  • Implement direct and indirect WDM actions
  • Cover one part of the water management cycle
  • Have significant impact on water management
    practices in their areas

8
2.2.1 WDM in the MWSA
  • The main components of a WDM plan
  • An enabling policy environment for end-users and
    the MWSA
  • Appropriate institutional setup within the MWSA
  • Appropriate measures and implementation taken by
    the MWSA

9
2.2.1 WDM in the MWSA
  • MWSAs can make an impact on the enabling
    environment by
  • altering by-laws
  • introducing water conservation standards and
    norms
  • showcasing their own implementation of WDM as
    large water users

10
2.2.1 WDM in the MWSA
  • A WDM plan for an MWSA should
  • implement WDM measures for the MWSA
  • promote the implementation of WDM measures by
    end-users and bulk water suppliers
  • promote economic, environmental and social
    benefits
  • be developed within IWRM and ILCP contexts

11
2.2.2 Sustainability in an MWSA context
  • Economic sustainability the efficiency of
    water service provision and the ability to
    continue to provide services in the future

12
2.2.2 Sustainability in an MWSA context
  • Social sustainability the ability to
    provide affordable water and to make sufficient
    water available for all residents and productive
    activities

13
2.2.2 Sustainability in an MWSA context
  • Environmental sustainability the maintenance
    of economic growth and development within the
    limits set by ecology
  • Environmental protection and economic
    development are complementary, not antagonistic

14
2.2.2 Sustainability in an MWSA context
  • Sustainable service provision when water
    continues to be available for the design period
    of a scheme, programme or initiative, in the
    quantity and quality that was originally planned

15
2.2.2 Sustainability in an MWSA context
  • Elements required for sustainability
  • proper design and planning
  • money for recurring expenses and repairs
  • consumer acceptance of the service
  • adequate supply from the source
  • sound construction
  • Sustainability is a key objective of WDM

16
2.2.3 Municipal water sources
  • Fresh surface water
  • Fresh groundwater
  • Re-use of return flows
  • Quantity, quality, and reliability are all
    extremely important

17
2.3.1 The municipal water supply chain
  • Water resource management
  • Water distribution management
  • End-user efficiency and demand management
  • Return flow management
  • WDM measures need to be targeted at specific
    stages in the water supply and management chain

18
2.3.1 The municipal water supply chain
  • The South African DWAF has illustrated possible
    WDM measures at each management level (Figure 1)
  • The line between Water Conservation (WC) and WDM
    becomes thin
  • Best results are achieved when both are pursued
    simultaneously.
  • WDM is broader than WC all WC measures fall
    within WDM

19
2.3.2 MWSA clients
  • Bulk suppliers of raw or treated water
  • government
  • parastatals
  • autonomous suppliers
  • Water management institutions

20
MWSA clients (Cont.)
  • Regulators
  • End-users
  • domestic users
  • industries
  • private and public service sectors

21
Activity
  • What institutions and organisations does your
    MWSA deal with?
  • From whom do you source water?
  • To whom do you supply water?
  • Which Acts and regulations affect you?
  • Which departments affect or control your MWSA?
  • Which sectors of the economy rely on your MWSA
    for water supply and/or management?
  • Use this information for your WDM plan

22
2.3.3 Accountability of MWSAs
  • WDM in municipal areas is a shared responsibility
    of all stakeholders
  • In most countries,
  • MWSA officials are accountable to their
    councillors
  • Councillors are accountable to the electorate
  • This may become obscured with privatised and
    commercialised utilities

23
2.3.3 Accountability of MWSAs
  • SA DWAF WDM principles
  • Water institutions should supply water
    efficiently and effectively, minimising water
    losses and promoting WDM/WC among end-users
  • Consumers should not waste water and should use
    it efficiently
  • WDM and WC are integral parts of the water
    resources and water service planning process

24
Activity
  • SA WDM objectives
  • Water resource management
  • Water distribution management
  • End-user efficiency and demand
  • Return flow management
  • Are they relevant to your municipal water supply
    and management chain?
  • Are there others you could add?

25
2.4 Integrated Least Cost Planning
  • ILCP is
  • a methodology that determines the effectiveness
    of infrastructure augmentation decisions
  • a measure of whether or not the right decision is
    being made

26
2.4 Integrated Least Cost Planning
  • The aim to keep water supply costs to end-users
    as low as possible by considering the
    effectiveness of the entire water chain
  • The challenge to minimise the cost to the
    end-user as though each party in the water chain
    were integrated into one body

27
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
  • Rand Water supplies water to
  • 13 municipalities
  • 3 metropolitan areas
  • 10 million people
  • an area of 18 000 km2

28
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
  • Figure 2 Rand Water area of supply within South
    Africa

29
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
30
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
  • Causes of premature augmentation of
    infrastructure
  • Demand projections
  • Difference in the start point and growth rates of
    projections

31
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
  • Figure 4 Costs due to difference in start point
    and growth rate projections

32
Case study Rand waters ILCP model
  • Excessive water loss
  • Inefficient use of water
  • Loss
  • Conclusions

33
2.4 Integrated Least Cost Planning
Institution Water supply costs ILCP issues
Bulk water supplier 0.75/m3 Cheapest source of supply?
MWSA 0.50/m3 LC treatment and distribution mechanism
Total water costs 1.25/m3 Is it possible to reduce the total water costs by improving on any stage in the water chain?
34
2.4 Integrated Least Cost Planning
  • Ensures that social and environmental concerns
    are adequately taken care of
  • Requires cross-institutional planning and
    co-operation

35
2.5 WDM reasons
  • WDM is a tool, not a goal
  • Social, financial and environmental reasons
  • Specific reasons vary from case to case

36
2.5 WDM reasons direct incentives
  • Escalating costs of water augmentation schemes
  • Reliance on non-renewable water resources
  • Reliance on shared water sources
  • High water leakages
  • Inefficiencies in end-use

37
2.5.1 Social reasons
  • Saved water serves those without previous access
  • Improved service delivery
  • Lead by example
  • Good customer service leads to rise in payment
    levels

38
2.5.1 Social reasons
  • Raised awareness among end-users
  • Keeps rates affordable
  • Safeguards water resources for current growth and
    future generations

39
2.5.2 Financial reasons
  • Flexible and incremental implementation spreads
    costs over time
  • Lower customer charges
  • Benefit/cost ratio may exceed 101
  • Reduces need for water purification and treatment

40
2.5.2 Financial reasons
  • Reduces expenditure on capital-intensive
    augmentation schemes
  • Improved affordability increases customer base
  • Reduces UAL and loss of revenues

41
2.5.2 Financial reasons
  • Ring-fenced revenue retained within departments
    for
  • Maintenance
  • Service delivery
  • Expansion
  • Better water resource management
  • Increases productive water use
  • Consumers benefit from reduced bills

42
2.5.3 Environmental reasons
  • Water for ecological requirements
  • Promotes sustainable use through water efficient
    practice
  • Reduces pollution through effluent-quality
    tariffs
  • Increased resource use efficiency

43
Summary
  • WDM serves not only environmental purposes
  • WDM has sound economic and social reasons

44
2.6 WDM constraints
  • Constraints
  • defer or prevent the adoption or implementation
    of WDM measures
  • are well documented
  • are powerful
  • vary between authors and studies

45
2.6.1 Understanding constraints
  • Organise your thinking about constraints
  • Identify
  • Structure
  • Analyse spatially
  • international
  • national
  • district
  • local

46
2.6.1 Understanding constraints
  • Analyse by stakeholder
  • Water planners/managers
  • Bulk suppliers
  • MWSAs
  • End-users
  • Resolve or mitigate

47
2.6.1.1 Structuring constraints
  • Information and awareness
  • WDM capacity and infrastructure
  • Habits and attitudes
  • Policy and regulation

48
2.6.1.1 Structuring constraints
  • Costs and benefits
  • Uncertainties
  • Macroeconomic conditions
  • Water scarcity extent and nature

49
Information and awareness
  • Lack of awareness about
  • water scarcity
  • WDM contents
  • institutional roles and responsibilities

50
Information and awareness
  • Trends
  • There is confusion and uncertainty about
    information
  • There is a lack of awareness about water scarcity
  • Awareness about WDM is gradually increasing

51
Human and financial resources
  • Lack of
  • human resources and skills
  • WDM champions
  • financial resources
  • specific WDM funding
  • co-ordination through the water supply and
    management chain
  • technical know-how

52
Human and financial resources
  • Trends
  • HR and skills are most problematic at local level
  • WDM champions are emerging
  • Funding of WDM remains a problem
  • Co-ordination amongst stakeholders in water
    supply chain is improving slowly

53
Infrastructure
  • Constraints
  • Lack of metering
  • Old infrastructure
  • Poor maintenance
  • Trends
  • Vary between countries

54
Habits and attitudes
  • Constraints
  • Resistance to change
  • Traditional supply bias and economic interest in
    supply interventions
  • Lack of political will
  • WDM only for droughts?
  • Trends
  • Most constraints are gradually easing

55
Policy and legislation
  • Constraints
  • WDM only recently incorporated into policies and
    legislation
  • Low priority for WDM
  • Trends
  • Large differences between countries
  • Gradual improvement in policy adoption and
    legislation

56
Costs and benefits
  • Constraints
  • Subsidies discourage WDM
  • Costs precede benefits
  • O M costs are often neglected in water planning
  • No cost-benefit assessment of water management
    options

57
Costs and benefits
  • Trends
  • Water tariff subsidies are being reduced as a
    function of applying WDM

58
Uncertainties
  • Constraints
  • WDM results less tangible than water augmentation
  • Full implications of WDM uncertain due to limited
    experience

59
Uncertainties
  • Trends
  • The availability of case studies is
  • reducing uncertainty over WDM results
  • improving the predictability of WDM implications

60
Macroeconomic conditions
  • Constraints
  • Shortage of WDM funding
  • Style of governance
  • Degree of stability
  • Trends
  • Vary greatly across the region

61
Water scarcity
  • Constraints
  • Degree and nature of water scarcity
  • Trends
  • Varies greatly across the region and may not
    require WDM intervention

62
Overview
  • Wide range of constraints
  • Substantial differences among countries
  • Most constraints are easing
  • Water-scarce countries with relatively good
    governance have the most comprehensive WDM
    approach
  • Constraints change over time
  • WDM strategies must work under different
    macroeconomic conditions

63
Activity
  • In groups, examine the list of constraints in
    Table 10
  • Discuss what trends have taken place over the
    last ten years in your country
  • Review the solutions given for overcoming the
    constraints
  • Discuss the greater participation of end-users,
    particularly women, in overcoming the constraints

64
Activity
  • How could traditional knowledge and water
    management practices be used to overcome
    constraints?
  • For each constraint, formulate a specific
    appropriate strategy for your situation
  • Add any new constraints your group has identified
    and rank them for your country

65
2.7.3 Case study City of Bulawayo
  • Examine the drivers
  • WDM plan
  • WDM approach
  • Constraints
  • Achievements
  • Lessons learnt

66
2.7.3 Case study City of Bulawayo
  • Average rainfall
  • 500 mm/a
  • Pop. 1 Million
  • Volume of water supplied 120 000 m3/day
  • Level of service 99 full reticulation
  • 106 000 connections
  • 90 are metered
  • Distribution network
  • 2 100 km

67
City of Bulawayo - drivers for WDM
  • Water supply constraints
  • Recurrent droughts
  • Water scarcity
  • Water sector reforms

68
City of Bulawayo - alternatives
Project Yield (106 m3/a) NPV (US/m3)
Gwayi-Shangani dam 141 0.55
Lower Tuli dam 65 1.24
Zambezi pipeline 57 2.23
Glass Block dam 28 0.77
Mtshabezi pipeline 8 1.17
Umguza well-field 4 0.22
69
City of Bulawayo - WDM alternative
  • In the short term (lt 5 years)
  • WDM at various levels
  • Reducing losses from 23 to 15
  • Cost US0.04/m3
  • Cheaper than any new alternative sources

70
City of Bulawayo - water loss reduction plan
  • Establishing economic levels for loss reduction
  • Pilot studies
  • Utility mapping
  • Network modelling
  • Analysis of cost data

71
City of Bulawayo - reduction of UAL
72
City of Bulawayo - other WDM activities
  • Water conservation campaign and public education
  • Reuse and recycling of wastewater
  • Pricing of water to reflect scarcity (highest
    block US0.25/m3)
  • Setting up a management information system
  • Metering
  • Review of the implications of sector reforms

73
City of Bulawayo - lessons
  • WDM implementation is usually triggered by severe
    water shortages
  • WDM should be evaluated and appraised along with
    other alternative sources
  • WDM is about 50 social engineering
  • Wastewater recycling and reuse is an important
    WDM option
  • Water pricing to reflect scarcity with subsidies
    for the poor

74
City of Bulawayo - lessons
  • Computerised management information system is
    essential
  • Metering is indispensable (bulk, zones, district,
    consumer)
  • A holistic approach is important (WDM Plans,
    Strategies Unit 4)
  • External expertise and financing may be required

75
2.7 Open discussion on other case studies
  • Hermanus
  • Windhoek
  • Kwekwe
  • Other

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