The use of residential water consumption as an urban planning tool: a pilot study in Adelaide

This paper examines the water consumption patterns for different types of residential dwellings and areas in Adelaide, Australia. The method uses datasets regularly collected and maintained by a number of organizations to allow water consumption patterns to be analyzed and examined over time. The results suggest that water consumption varies between different types of residential dwellings, and areas, and that using metropolitan averages to measure national consumption patterns can be misleading. Importantly, the results suggest that per capita consumption is not significantly different between different types of dwellings. The ability to analyze water consumption patterns at the local level would enable planners and managers to better target initiatives aimed at reducing water consumption, and would also give planners a new tool to assess planning and environmental policies.

[1]  M. Espey,et al.  Price elasticity of residential demand for water: A meta‐analysis , 1997 .

[2]  J N Lester,et al.  Developing a sustainable energy strategy for a water utility. Part I: A review of the UK legislative framework. , 2002, Journal of environmental management.

[3]  L. Fredman For the Public Health: the Hunter District Water Board 1892–1992 by Clem Lloyd, Patrick Troyand Shelley Schreiner (Longman Chesire, Melbourne, 1992), pp.xii + 364, $29.50, ISBN 0-582 -87686-9 (pbk) , 1993 .

[4]  Debra Wilkinson,et al.  Resetting the Compass: Australia's Journey Towards Sustainability , 2000 .

[5]  Fernando Arbués,et al.  Estimation of residential water demand: a state-of-the-art review , 2003 .

[6]  K. Bakker,et al.  Privatizing Water, Producing Scarcity: The Yorkshire Drought of 1995* , 2000 .

[7]  M. Wackernagel,et al.  Our ecological footprint , 1996 .

[8]  R. Crane Water markets, market reform and the urban poor: Results from Jakarta, Indonesia , 1994 .

[9]  Graeme C. Dandy,et al.  Estimating Residential Water Demand in the Presence of Free Allowances , 1997 .

[10]  J. McLennan To boil or not: drinking water for children in a periurban barrio. , 2000, Social science & medicine.

[11]  Anders Jägerskog,et al.  Water wars-privatization, pollution and profit. , 2005 .

[12]  J. Handmer,et al.  Uncertainty, sustainability and change☆ , 1992 .

[13]  Stephen Pullen,et al.  Embodied and Operational Energy Consumption in the City , 2003 .

[14]  M. Renwick,et al.  Demand Side Management Policies for Residential Water Use: Who Bears the Conservation Burden? , 1998 .