California Water Agencies Can't Keep Close Track of Pipes Leak
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Academic
With California homeowners taking steps to save water during the drought, they may be dismayed to hear that a new UCLA report found that water agencies are unable to keep close track of how much their own pipes are leaking, report finds
The report is particularly timely due to a new bill winding its way through the California State Legislature that would develop stricter rules for monitoring and preventing water loss, require water agencies to track leaks, breaks and water loss more closely by conducting annual audits, and make the audits public. Senate Bill 555 by state Sen. Lois Wolk recently passed one Assembly committee, despite resistance from the California Municipal Water Association, which lobbies on behalf of large public water utilities.
Researchers with the UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability surveyed 10 water retailers in the Los Angeles region, and concluded that there's no way to know how much water is lost to leakage and breaks. This is largely because California doesn't require careful monitoring and water retailers do not invest enough to track water lost to leaks and breaks. The survey respondents were guaranteed confidentiality.
"It appears that most retailers don't think of minimizing leaks and breaks as a conservation responsibility, despite the cost and scarcity of water in California," said co-author Madelyn Glickfeld, director of the UCLA Water Resources Group. "States such as Georgia, Washington and Texas actively encourage and train water agencies in conducting water system audits, but not California."
The report found that 6 of the 10 surveyed agencies did not distinguish between water leaks and unbilled or unauthorized water uses, and many failed to follow best practices for leak detection.
The four retailers that do measure leaks reported the amount of water lost at 3 percent to 4 percent, which the researchers described as "an improbably low percentage" compared to the best international rates of 10 percent. Israel, renowned for water conservation, reports a 10 percent water-loss rate, and experts in Australia, using more sophisticated technology than that used in California, also see 10 percent as a likely minimum leakage rate, Glickfeld said.
The technology to monitor pipes for stress points and leaks is available, said the study's lead author Kartiki Naik, a staff research associate at UCLA's Institute of the Environment and Sustainability.
"Los Angeles County seems to lack a proactive strategy," Naik said. "Only three out of the 10 retailers that we surveyed used available leak-detection technology to prevent leaks. Only six had a program to replace a certain amount of old pipe each year and their maintenance schedules would take about 100-330 years to replace every pipe."
The research shows the need for greater regulations, said Wolk, the author of the state legislation.
Source: Phys.org
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Taxonomy
- Leakage
- Water Loss Control
- Pipes and Pipelines