4.7 Article

Mining the gap in long-term residential water and electricity conservation

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/abbfc2

Keywords

residential conservation; water-energy nexus; water efficiency; energy efficiency

Funding

  1. Woods Institute for the Environment, Environmental Venture Projects program

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Climate change and economic development provide strong rationale for urban water and electricity conservation. There exists a significant 'conservation gap' in long-term residential consumption trends, with widespread factors such as the proliferation of consumer electronics and small appliances driving increases in electricity use. Droughts have successfully leveraged for long-term water savings, while similar opportunities for electricity policy makers were not generally available during the study period.
Climate change and economic development provide a strong rationale for urban water and electricity conservation. Although behavioral and technological factors link short-term conservation of both resources, their long-term residential consumption trends have diverged across industrialized nations: from 1990 to 2010, per capita water use decreased, while per capita electricity use increased. This long-term 'conservation gap' has not generally been examined but it presents an opportunity to better understand what drives persistent residential conservation. Here, we analyze 2002-2012 water and electricity consumption from 38 000 California residences to characterize the conservation gap and its socio-economic determinants. Aggregate per-residence consumption figures show a 19% decline in water use-concentrated in the 2007-2009 drought-and an 8% increase in electricity use-coinciding with early 2000s economic growth. We find no meaningful socio-economic variation in micro-scale consumption trends across the study area but the 'gap' tendency is greater in residences with low customer-turnover, suggesting that widespread factors-including the proliferation of consumer electronics and small appliances-drove electricity use increases. Long-term water conservation was also widespread, suggesting that droughts provide immediate, locally-driven conservation imperatives that have been successfully leveraged for long-term water savings.Similar episodes were not generally available to electricity policy makers during the study period, but extreme climate events could drive energy efficiency campaigns in the future.

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