Performing a Domestic Water Use and
Conservation Audit
Performing a water audit of your home is the first step in
designing an effective water conservation plan. A water audit
surveys all water-using or conveying fixtures, plumbing, equipment
and practices in your home to determine the present water uses,
losses, and conservation practices and to recommend
improvements. A water audit serves as the starting point for
identifying losses and implementing useful water efficiency
practices.
The following steps are designed as a general guide to the water
audit process. Since this is a generic document, not all portions of
the audit process will apply to your home.
Step 1: Identify your
source.
Where do you get your water? Is it from an offsite
municipal or community water supply, or an onsite private water
supply?
Step 2: Gather all existing information
including:
- Water and sewer bills.
- Number of occupants and a typical schedule of their
activity. Does anyone stay at home all day? These
factors make a difference in the magnitude of your water use.
- Any paperwork (owner's manuals) related to water-using
equipment, appliances, fixtures, pumps, etc.
- Capacities, storage, and water use of all appliances,
fixtures, pumps, hoses, and other water-using equipment such as
spas and pools. Some of this information should be in the
owner's manuals. You may have to call the manufacturer or
installer (like your plumber) to get the information you don't
have.
Step 3: Quantify your water
use.
If your house is metered this task is easy. Locate your
water meter. It may be located at or near the property line
and probably has the name of the water company on it
somewhere. Most meters read in cubic feet. To convert
cubic feet to gallons, multiply the reading by 7.48. To
measure daily water use, record the meter readings at the beginning
and end of any 24-hour period. Subtract the initial reading
from the final one. This is how much water you used on that
day. Do this several times and average the daily readings.
If you want to know how much water individual appliances or
practices use, read the meter before and after each water use.
Make sure no one else in the house is using water when you are
taking these readings. For instance, if you want to know how
much water you use when washing dishes, take a meter reading before
and after you run the dishwasher, but make sure no one flushes a
toilet or takes a shower during the cycle.
If your home is not metered, determining water use is more
difficult. You can easily measure the flow from your faucets,
showerheads or garden hose by following the step below.
- Hold a large container under the device to be measured and run
the water for 10 seconds. Measure the amount of water in the
container and multiply it by 6 to get the volume per minute.
This is the flow rate for that device. For example, if there
are 2 quarts of water in the container after 10 seconds, multiply
2 by 6, equaling 12 quarts. Dividing this number by 4 (the
number of quarts in a gallon) yields a flow rate of 3 gallons per
minute for that faucet.
- You can determine the water used by appliances and other
water-using devices by contacting the manufacturer, reading the
owner's manual, or checking with your plumber.
Step 4. Perform the Audit.
Where and how do you use your water?
- Catalog your water-using devices. Note the number of
each, the manufacturer and the amount of water each uses (flow
rate calculated in step 3). For example: Three low-flush American
Standard toilets at 1.6 gallons per flush each. Don't forget
to include fixtures and practices employed in outside water use.
- Multiply the flow rate for each device by the amount of time
the device is used in a day for each water use, like brushing
teeth or taking a shower. For instance, multiply the flow rate of
a garden hose in gallons per minute times the number of minutes
you run the water. If you water the garden twice a day for 20
minutes with a 5-gallon per minute hose, you would use 200 gallons
of water a day on your garden.
- Note any leaks and try and determine how much water is being
lost to that leak. If the leak is in a kitchen sink, place a
measuring device under the leak and measure how long it takes to
fill. Let's say it takes 15 minutes to fill a 2-quart
measure. This means the leaking faucet wastes 2 gallons of
water an hour, or 48 gallons of water a day. Depending on
your water rates, one small leak could be costing you about $5 a
month. If you have your own well, this leak could cost as
much as $30 a month in electricity to run your pump.
- If you aren't sure whether you have leaks in the house, turn
off all water-using devices and watch your meter. If it
still spins, you have a leak. Otherwise listen to your
pump. It shouldn't come on if you aren't using any water.
- Identify and quantify water conservation devices and practices
already in place, such as low flow faucets and shutting off the
water when you brush your teeth. Quantify their water use
and savings over conventional devices and methods.
Step 5. Analyze the Audit Results.
- Determine how and where you use water in your house.
- Identify areas where you can save water. Include
retrofit and replacement of high water-using devices and
appliances. See fact sheet Water
Efficiency Practices for Indoor Water Use.
Determine which water efficiency measures you might implement in
your home.
Step 6. Prepare a
Benefit/Cost Analysis of Potential Water Conservation
Measures.
- Calculate the cost of water lost to leaks as identified in
Step 4. This cost could be either cost/gallon to buy water
or cost/gallon to pump it. Be sure to include cost of
wastewater disposal. If you know the wattage rating for your pump
you can estimate cost of pumping water. Multiply the wattage
times the number of hours a day the pump runs times the
kilowatt-hour rate your electric company charges. A
licensed pump installer should be able to tell you the wattage
rating for your type of pump.
- Consider all costs associated with a proposed conservation
measure including initial purchase and installation.
- Determine the savings the new conservation measure will
provide. Consider the cost savings of buying, pumping or
heating water that would be used without the measure and the
disposal costs of wastewater. Also take into consideration
savings due to leak repair. Water efficiency practice
implementation could eliminate or reduce the need for water pump
or septic system upgrades or replacements. Take these
avoided costs into consideration as well.
- Calculate a payback period for water efficiency
measures. The payback period equals the amount of time it
will take to recover the initial expenditure of a retrofit as a
result of the savings associated with its use.
Step 7. Develop a Long-Range Water
Conservation Plan.
Utilize your audit results and benefit/cost analysis to formulate
your plan.
- Include a regular leak detection and repair program. See
fact sheet Water
Efficiency Practices for Indoor Water Use.
- Determine where and how you will replace or retrofit water
efficiency devices. For example, "I'm going to install
faucet aerators in the kitchen and bathrooms."
- Determine which, where, and how water efficiency practices
will be implemented. For instance, "Everyone in the family
will take 5-minute showers and turn off the water while brushing
their teeth. I'll put a timer in each bathroom to remind
everyone to take shorter showers."
- Document an implementation schedule for any proposed water
efficiency practices and upgrades. For example, "I am going
to start watering the garden by drip irrigation next summer and
I'm going to mail order soaker hoses this winter."
- Educate your family about the implemented practices and the
installed devices. Without your family's help, water
efficiency practices will not work.
For Further Information
Contact Water Supply Engineering Bureau at 603-271-2513 or visit
our website at www.des.state.nh.us/ws.htm
Environment Canada. Overview of water audits,
including how to measure domestic unmetered flows. www.on.ec.gc.ca/greatlakes/Home-WS7E5E6AF1-1_En.htm
Utah State University Horticulture Dept. Landscaping
water audit information. www.hort.usu.edu/
References: _____; MIL-Handbook-1165, Water
Conservation; US Dept. of Defense; 1997 Vickers, Amy;
Handbook of Water Use and Conservation; WaterPlow Press,
Amherst, MA; 2001 |