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TURNING THE TIDE ON WATER WASTE. How Seattle Created a Popular Icon to Change Consumer Behavior Margaret Pageler July 2007. SEATTLE’S WATER SYSTEM. Serves 1.3 million people Source: mountain reservoirs on two rivers Fill during winter-spring Drawdown during summer
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TURNINGTHE TIDE ON WATER WASTE How Seattle Created a Popular Icon to Change Consumer Behavior Margaret Pageler July 2007
SEATTLE’S WATER SYSTEM Serves 1.3 million people Source: mountain reservoirs on two rivers Fill during winter-spring Drawdown during summer Rainfall, snowpack and inflows highly variable
SEATTLE’S CHALLENGE - SALMON Salmon need strong flows in the rivers at just the time of year when rainfall is lowest and water demand is highest
Conservation as a Strategy • Developing a new water supply source is high risk, high cost and takes long lead time • Seattle chose conservation as cost-effective program to delay need for new supply • Conservation preserves in-stream flows and manages for climate uncertainty
STEP ONE - ANALYSIS • Conservation Potential Assessment • Seattle implemented 40 mgd of water savings in the first 15 years • Second phase evaluated 135 measures and identified an additional 15 mgd water savings through 2030 at annual cost of $1.4 million • Programs can be ramped up or down
Step Two – New Values -Giving Water Efficiency a Face • The salmon life cycle helps focus water savings at critical times of year • Heroic journey of the salmon links citizens to sea, rivers and streams • Appeal to “save salmon” has become an effective demand management tool Salmon as an Icon
Conservation Motivators • Low-cost way for customers to reduce their water bills • Low-cost insurance for climate change and other uncertainties • Saves energy and reduces wastewater and drainage flows • Manages water resources responsibly • Keeps water in rivers for salmon
Source of Savings –Non-Revenue Water Savings Non-revenue water reduced from 15% to 5% • Aggressive leak management • Changing flushing and washing practices • Covering and re-lining in-city reservoirs
Source of Savings –Salmon-Friendly Rate Structure • Set marginal rate equal to marginal cost of water (avoided cost of new supply) • Seasonal rates – higher in summer “peak” • Inclined block for residential customers • “Third tier” rate for wasteful summer use • “Saving salmon” makes tiered rates politically possible
Source of Savings –Conservation Programs • Provide rebates for hardware and plumbing code upgrades • Target high-use and single-pass systems • Partner with energy companies for hot-water savings • Secure participation by appeal to “save salmon”
Source of Savings – Changed Outdoor Landscaping • Partner with garden stores, landscapers • Low-water-use plants • Use less fertilizer and pesticides • Results – “Salmon-Friendly Gardening” reduces summer peak water use Center for Urban Horticulture: Soest Herbaceous Display GardenDisplays perennials and bulbs in eight different common urban conditions, with variable soil textures, watering regimes, and sun/shade environments so visitors will be able to determine which plants are most appropriate for particular home garden conditions.
Community Activities Festivals Stream restoration work parties Native American celebrations Adopt-a-stream
Educational Activities Field trips Computer games Science lessons Unique watershed education center Salmon as an Icon
Reinforcing the Icon -Public Art Sound Transit Salmon Art near Eastgate Park and Ride
Conservation Results • Water supply extended 50 years • Critics now supporters • Citizen satisfaction • Insurance for uncertain future • Politicians recognized for sustainable leadership • PROTECTION FOR ENDANGERED SALMON