Time of use tariffs: implications for water efficiency
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| Title | Time of use tariffs: implications for water efficiency |
|---|---|
| Author | Cole, Grahame; O'Halloran, Kelvin; Stewart, Rodney Anthony |
| Publication Title | The Sixth IWA Specialist Conference on Efficient Use and Management of Water |
| Year Published | 2011 |
| Place of publication | Jordan |
| Publisher | International Water Association |
| Abstract | Water utilities undertake long term planning for water source security, often with forecast cycles of 20 to 30 years. Whilst this planning is generally involved with investigations of source water abstraction security and the need to build dams or to increase the recharge rate of groundwater aquifers, planning for water efficiency gains occurs at annual intervals. Most water utilities in Australia are heavily engaged in water efficiency initiatives with rebate schemes for domestic water-efficient devices ubiquitous across the industry. Wide Bay Water Corporation (WBWC) also engages in these activities but is increasingly interested in the concept of Time of Use Tariffs (TOUT) to target high water users in order to reduce their demand on the system. In 2006, WBWC introduced smart metering technology across the city which captures hourly use data. Interrogation of this data has lead to the ability to identify water use patterns for every domestic and commercial water customer and to design specific interventions to encourage water efficiency, such as a TOUT for domestic customers. A TOUT has been developed that imposes a penalty on all individual consumption greater than 600L in any hourly interval of any day in the year. The tariff was designed to reduce both the annual maximum peak hour demand and annual maximum day consumption. The ability to reduce both of these infrastructure design parameters has the potential to deliver substantial savings in infrastructure planning and deployment. This paper details the design process of this tariff, examines the infrastructure savings potential derived by network modelling explores and the regulatory framework engagement hurdles to be overcome in order to implement such tariffs in the water industry. |
| Peer Reviewed | No |
| Published | Yes |
| Publisher URI | http://www.iwahq.org/q1/events/iwa-events/2011/the-6th-iwa-specialist-conference-on-efficient-use.html |
| Conference name | The Sixth IWA Specialist Conference on Efficient Use and Management of Water |
| Location | Dead Sea, Jordan |
| Date From | 2011-03-29 |
| Date To | 2011-04-02 |
| URI | http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40926 |
| Date Accessioned | 2011-07-04 |
| Date Available | 2011-09-27T06:57:22Z |
| Language | en_AU |
| Research Centre | Centre for Infrastructure Engineering and Management |
| Faculty | Faculty of Science, Environment, Engineering and Technology |
| Subject | Environmental Management; Water Resources Engineering |
| Publication Type | Conference Publications (Full Written Paper - Non-Refereed) |
| Publication Type Code | e2 |
Please use this identifier to cite this record: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/40926
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