Conserve water by using stored rainwater in the garden |
Taking the average usage as 150 l/p/d, and allowing for leakage of 25% (actually it was 24.6%, down by 0.4% on the previous year), the energy used by the water companies in supplying this water and treating the sewage is just 0.28 kWh/p/d (kWh/person/day) [1]. However, this is just the domestic water use - taking into account commercial and industrial consumption as well we used 213 l/p/d water requiring 0.4 kWh/person/day. Compared to the average UK person's energy consumption of 81 kWh/p/d [2] this is just 0.5%.
By the numbers
- UK average domestic water usage 150 l/p/d
- UK total water usage 213 l/p/d
- Add leakage 25% total 283 l/p/d
- Water treatment energy 0.4 kWh/p/d
- Desalination would add 1.1 kWh/p/d
- cf total UK energy use 81 kWh/p/d
In practice, we would not need to desalinate all our water and the requirement would mainly come in the summer time which means we could expect to get a reasonable proportion of this energy from renewable sources such as solar panels. If we were desalinating one quarter of our water, in July, using energy from solar panels, a city the size of Cambridge would need about 45,000 square meters of solar panels, or 4.5 ha - around 6 football pitches[4].
Cambridge is not near the sea. It would be a great deal more sensible to reuse treated waste water. For many people this concept has a high yuk factor but in fact it is already happening, albeit indirectly, in some places. For example the Langford Water Treatment plant in Essex pumps cleaned waste water into the River Chelmer 4km upstream from the point where water is abstracted for the Hanningfield Reservoir [5]. Treated waste water is often higher in quality than river water [6].
Sources:
[1] Water UK Publications: Sustainability
[2] Energy and Carbon Emissions: the way we live today by Nicola Terry
[3] ENERGY REQUIREMENTS OF DESALINATION PROCESSES (Encyclopedia of Desalination and Water Resources)
[4] Based on 120,000 people, solar panels efficiency 15%, total July insolation 5 kWh/m2/day
[5] Langford Recycling Scheme
[6] Efficient re-use for potable water supply Environment Agency
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