Title: Non revenue water
1Non revenue water
save water ..save life..
project by soham water management utility
services pvt. ltd.
2Non revenue water
- Non revenue water (NRW) is water that has been
produced and is lost before it reaches the
customer. Losses can be real losses... - Unaccounted-for water is the difference between
the amount of water produced, or purchased, and
the amount of water sold to all customers. - Unaccounted-for water includes underground
leakage unauthorized use unavoidable leakage,
inaccurate master, industrial, commercial and
domestic meters and unusual causes.
3Non revenue water
- Breakdown of NRW into its components
- The International Water Association (IWA) has
developed a detailed methodology to assess the
various components of NRW. - Unbilled authorized consumption
- Apparent losses (water theft and metering
inaccuracies) - Real losses (from transmission mains, storage
facilities, distribution mains or service
connections) - In many utilities the exact breakdown of NRW
components and sub-components is simply not
known, making it difficult to decide about the
best course of action to reduce NRW. Metering of
water use at the level of production (wells, bulk
water supply), at key points in the distribution
network and for consumers is essential to
estimate levels of NRW - For developing countries the World Bank has
estimated that, on average, apparent losses - in
particular theft through illegal connections -
account for about 40 of NRW. In some cities,
apparent losses can be higher than real losses.
4Non revenue water-objective
- Objective of Work
- Digitalizing the water distribution network by
GIS - Install flow meter for audit account of water
distribution - Prevent Leakage/Losses
- Prevent/ Find the E-legal water distribution
connection. - Optimize the demand according to supply / Save
the water. - Estimate accurate Revenue of water/ Usages.
- Maintain the accurate data set for water usages.
- Minimize the maintenance of the system.
- Fault free/ Continuous water distribution system/
supply
5Step-1 Post Processing System
Methodology
Base Map
Topo Map/ Image
Field Data
GIS/ Data set
MDR System/ Post Processing
EPANET/ Analysis
Full fill the Objective
6Non revenue water
- DIGITALIZING THE WATER DISTRIBUTION NETWORK BY
GIS MAPPING - INSTALLATION OF FLOWMETER AT REQUIRED NODES
- ACTUAL ASSESSMENT OF WATER LOSS
- REAL TIME DATA COLLECTION THROUGH GPRS MODEM
- LEAK / THEFT DETECTION
- CONTROLLING MONITORING THE WATER DISTRIBUTION
NETWORK THROUGH SCADA PROGRAMMING - WMS / MIS TO CONTROL ACCESS ONLINE WATER
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK. - ALSO GENERATES REQUIRED REPORTS PER DAY,PER WEEK
OR AS PER REQUIREMENTS. WMS STORE ALL OF DATAS
FOR LAST TEN YEARS.
7Step-1 Pre Processing System/ Fully Automation
Methodology
Base Map
Topo Map/ Image
Field Data
GIS/ Data set
GTI System/ Pre Processing
EPANET/ Analysis
Real Time Complex System
SCADA Analysis
Full fill the Objective
8Non Revenue Water
- Benefits of NRW reduction
- Financial gains from increased water sales or
reduced water production, including possibly the
delay of costly capacity expansion - Increased knowledge about the distribution
system can adopt automation. - Increased water availability as losses recovered
hence more water for more people. - Reduced property damage
- Reduced risk of contamination
- More stabilized water pressure throughout the
system - Leakage reduction may also be an opportunity to
improve relations with the public and employees.
A leak detection program may be highly visible,
encouraging people to think about water
conservation.
9Non Revenue Water
- Estimated Non Revenue Water among ULBs in Gujarat
- Category of ULB Non Revenue Water ()
- Gujarat state Average 30
- Municipal Corporations 34
- Class A 33
- Class B 26
- Class C 32
- Class D 30
- (Source Based on PAS Survey.)
- The average NRW across all classes of ULBs in
Gujarat ranges between 26-34 indicating that
nearly one-third of water is lost in
distribution. - If the NRW is reduced to the benchmark level of
20, there would be an increase in water supplied
to the consumers and an increase in revenue to
the ULBs. It must be recognised that NRW is
difficult to estimate in a context where there
are no measurements of flow at source of water or
at major distribution points and consumer points.
In the PAS survey, the NRW measurements are based
on estimates of water supply and consumption.
Better measurement of NRW can be done by
conducting preliminary water audits. - Our estimates of NRW are on the lower side, as
we have made assumptions about water consumption
at the consumer end. No ULB in Gujarat has water
meters, nor do most ULBs in Gujarat conduct water
audit to assess the quantum of NRW. - In one municipality in Gujarat, where a
preliminary water audit was undertaken recently,
the NRW was estimated to be 44, as against the
33 value. -
- (Ref. Ministry of Urban Development (MOUD), 2008,
Handbook of Service Level Benchmarks)
10Non Revenue Water
- A demonstration of how this can be done, we look
at the case of Kalol municipality. Kalol is
located about 20 km by road from Gandhinagar
about 30 km from Ahmedabad. It has a population
of approximately 150,000 (111,700 as per 2001
census). It receives its water from both surface
and ground water sources. The major source is
Pratappura Water Treatment Plant set up by the
Gujarat Water Supply and Sewerage Board (GWSSB)
that takes about 12.5 MLD of water from Narmada
Canal. Besides this, the 21 boreholes within the
city are used to draw about 5 MLD of water. - The municipality has 17,800 connections serving
about 30,000 households. With the present
estimated population, the supply requirement is
about 23 million (assuming 135 lpcd). Thus there
is a shortfall of 6 MLD of water. - A preliminary water audit suggests that the NRW
in Kalol is 44, which is much higher than the
33 reported by the ULB. It is thus possible to
meet the shortfall of water in Kalol by reducing
the NRW. Physical losses account for a major part
of NRW and the municipality would benefit
immensely from plugging all the leaks and
monitoring flows in the system regularly. - Kalol municipality spends nearly Rs.37.5 million
a year to operate and maintain its water supply
and collects only Rs.830,000 a year. There is a
large gap between its water related expenditures
and corresponding receipt. - As a first option, one can begin to look at ways
to cut expenditure. If the physical losses are
reduced (by plugging leaks), there will a saving
of Rs. 6.4 million. Similarly, the energy costs
can be reduced by Rs. 4.4 million through
replacement of old and inefficient pumps at a few
critical locations. On the revenue enhancement
front, Kalol needs to improve its collection
efficiency from 48 to 90, identify and
regularise illegal connections and start billing
them and expand coverage in slums and in other
areas. Our analysis shows that tariff revision
should be the last option to be considered as
this helps avoid passing on the ULB
inefficiencies to its paying consumers.
11Non Revenue Water
- HOW TO REDUCE NRW ?
- 1) DIGITIZING THE GIS MAP OF WATER DISTRIBUTION
NETWORK - 2) ACCESSMENT OF NRW IN DIFFERENT NODES /
BRANCHES OF WATER DISTRIBUTION NETWORK BY
ULTRASONIC DIGITAL FLOWMETER. - 3) MONITOR NRW LOSSES THROUGH METERING
- 4) DATA ACCESS OF NRW THROUGH GPRS
- 5) PREVENTION OF LEAK DETECTION ILLEGAL THEFT
BY GPR. ( GROUND PENETRATING RADAR ) - 6) FUTURE VISION BY USING SCADA PROGRAMMING AND
INSTRUMENTS AUTOMATION WE CAN MONITOR AND PREVENT
THE NRW LOSSES. EVEN WE CAN MAINTAIN THE DATA AND
CAN MONITOR THE DISTRIBUTION NETWORK THROUGH PC
FROM OFFICE.
12Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- Part 1 What is a GIS?
- GIS stands for geographic information System.
GIS has been developed in recent years for the
purpose of using andstudying geographic
information. Consequently, geography underpins
GIS and is the key to understanding it. - Geographic information is simply information that
expresses and describes the locations of objects
and features. It relates to the distribution and
patterns of physical and human features that
exist on the Earths surface. -
13Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- How do we create geographic information?
- Essentially, geographic information states what
is where. So to create geographic information, we
have to record these two elements somehow. They
can be captured through many different types of
observations, measurements and surveys. Data can
be sourced from aerial photography, satellite
images, field samples, land surveying, population
censuses, global positioning systems (GPS) and
government administrative records among others. -
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15Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- What are the essential elements of geographic
information? - Geographic information is simply information that
can be located. The most obvious source of
geographic information is maps, in which
information about the world around us is plotted
within a structured framework (a coordinate
system) that allows us to find its location.
However, maps are not simple representations of
geographic information and are themselves
produced by combining the three essential
components of geographic information - The location of the geographic information maps
use a coordinate system to allow locations to be
read - The shape (geometry) of the geographic
information the shape of the features and
themes are drawn onto the map - The description of the geographic information a
legend provides descriptions of the shapes drawn
on the map -
-
16Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- How do we represent geographical information in a
computer? - Geographic information contains locations, shapes
and descriptions of the information. A geographic
information system uses a computer to combine and
analyse multiple sets of geographic information.
In order to achieve this, it is necessary to code
the geographic information into a format that the
computer understands.Representing
locationFirstly, the geographic information
needs to be located using some sort of
cartographic format that the computer can
understand. This requires geographic information
in a GIS to also have information about the map
projection and coordinate system in which it is
stored entered. This data is usually input by the
GIS operator and stored alongside the geographic
information. Describing shapeSecondly, the
computer needs to have a way of storing the shape
of the geographic information. This might be the
locations of points, the shape of lines such as
roads, or the shape of polygon boundaries such as
the outline of a building (this is known as
vector data). It may also store geographic
information as a grid, with each cell in the grid
containing a subset of the geographic information
(this is known as raster data). Generally, the
computer relies on the complex shapes being
simplified into a number of simple, linked,
tables (often referred to as a database)
containing the coordinates of the features and
information about how each shape relates to those
around it.Describing the informationFinally,
the computer needs to hold descriptions of the
geographic information. This is also done using
tables containing descriptions that are linked to
the tables containing the shape information.
17Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- Summary
- The following diagram summarises the components
required to represent the physical features and
human features around us in a geographic
information system. -
18Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- What can the GIS software do with the information
stored in the computer? - GIS software has a large variety of tools of
varying levels of complexity. Listed below are
core standard functions that are common to most
GIS software packages. - Mapping and cartography Visualize features and
manipulate symbology and colours to create an
output map with title, scale bar, north arrow
etc. - Query Ask questions of feature attributes such
as where is? Whats the nearest? What
intersects with? - Select Identify features and their attributes
that meet some criteria. - Distance Calculates the distance between
features. - Buffers Rings drawn around features at a
specified distance from the features. - Overlay The display of multiple layers of
information at one location. - Clip Cuts an input layer to the size and extent
of a selected layer. - Merge Combines multiple layers into one layer.
- Raster analysis There is a whole separate suite
of tool for raster analysis that includes
classifying cells, deriving aspect and slope,
mosaicing and calculating new cell values among
many others. - 3D Data can be viewed with height in
3-dimensions for powerful visualization.
19Non Revenue Water- GIS Mapping
- Who uses GIS and Why?
- GIS has evolved into a technology that is used by
a huge number of industries and agencies to help
plan, design, engineer, build and maintain
information infrastructures that effects our
everyday lives. The table below lists common
users of GIS.Industry Use of GIS - Forestry Inventory and management of resources
- Police Crime mapping to target resources
- Transport Monitoring routes
- Utilities Managing pipe networks
- Oil Monitoring ships and managing pipelines
- Environment agencies Identifying areas of risk
from flood - Military Troop movement
- Mobile phone companies Locating masts
- Land ReGIStry Recording and managing land
- Agriculture Analyzing crop yield
- Electricity distribution co. infrastructural up
gradation consumer indexing
20Non Revenue Water- Assessment
- Before planning NRW reduction activities ideally
at least a quick water audit should be undertaken
to establish an initial water balance. This would
involve the following steps - Step 1 determine system input volume
- Step 2 determine authorized consumption
- ? billed authorized consumption
- ? unbilled authorized consumption
- Step 3 estimate commercial losses
- ? water theft, fraud
- ? meter under-registration
- ? data handling errors
- Step 4 calculate physical losses
21Non Revenue Water- Assessment
22Non Revenue Water- Assessment
- Leakage Classification
- Reported Bursts
- ? visible, phoned in by public, observed by water
utility - staff, normally large flow rate and short
run- time - Unreported Bursts
- ? non-visible, located during a leak detection
survey, often smaller but long run-time - Background Leakage
- ? very small leaks difficult and uneconomic to
detect and repair individually
23Non Revenue Water- Assessment
- Measure the flow by ultrasonic flow meter
- We can find out the branch or nodes of NRW.
B2
B1
B3
24Non Revenue Water- Assessment
25Non Revenue Water-GPRS Monitoring
26Non Revenue Water-GPRS Monitoring
27Non Revenue Water-GPRS Monitoring
GPRS / GSM DATA LOGGER
28Non Revenue Water-Leak Detection By GPRS/GSM
Technology
29Non Revenue Water-GPRS Monitoring
GTI COMMUNICATION STRUCTURE
30Non Revenue Water-Leak Detection By GPRS/GSM
Technology
31Non Revenue Water-Leak Detection By GPRS/GSM
Technology
GTI SPECIFICATION
32Non Revenue Water-Leak Detection By GPRS/GSM
Technology
PRESSURE DROP , LEAKAGE FLOW RATE
33Non Revenue Water-Leak Detection by GPRS/GSM
Technology
34LEAK INDICATION BY GROUND PENETRATING RADAR
- Tracing of loaded and dead cables, metal
pipelines (depth up to 6 m, distance of 5 km from
the transmitter connection point) - Tracing nonmetal pipelines by acoustic method.
- Water leak detection.
- Pinpoint of cable damages by acoustic and
electromagnetic methods. - Selection of the cable from a bunch.
- Detection of the places of pipes
depressurization (3 m depth) - Survey of areas before the ground-works
performing
35IT REALLY WORKS
- IMPLEMENTED ON FALASAN-VALASANA PROJECT
- WORKED OUT CONSUMPTION GIVES THE FIGURE OF 1.8
TIMES THE NORMAL USAGE - CAN FEED 5000 MORE HOUSE HOLDS FROM THE SAME
RESOURCES - CAN BE APPLIED TO REST AREAS LIKEWISE
36Future Vision- Thinking Out Of Box
- Usage of upgraded technology for automization
- Absolute system shall be replaced by high tech
configuration network - Will enable remote access control through
computerization - Monitoring evaluation to arrive-at the analyzed
data computation digitally through interlinked
SCADA with GPRS would be feasible - Shall have the apparent advantage of reduced men
power and eliminating human errors. - Reflection of State growth ranking at national
plateform.
37Non Revenue Water-Future Vision
Advantages
- Portable water availability to every household
both in urban and especially in remote rural
areas. - Increased irrigation by cultivating more area
using optimized water through MIS. - Would lead to increased ground water level
recharging. - Minimum bare usage of electricity will further
enhance surplus power to use elsewhere.
38Non Revenue Water-Future Vision
Advantages
- Would help in converting Gray/ Dark /Over
exploited areas into Green belt. - Public awareness would further accelerate the
Conservation Concepts. - Will boost the industrial growth too.
- Shall provide the strong water potential bank for
future generation.
39- THANK YOU
- soham water management utility services pvt.
Ltd. - First floor, gayatri complex, mahavirnagar,
himatnagar, gujarat- 383001. - Tel 02772 231357 / 231358
- Mobile 09377394439 / 09408305760
- Mail dushyant.soham_at_gmail.com /
info_at_sohamengg.in