posted on 2017-01-15, 22:59authored byFlower, David Jonathan Mark
The energy consumption and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with urban water
systems have come under scrutiny in recent times, as a result of increasing interest in climate
change, to which urban water systems are particularly vulnerable. The approach most
commonly taken previously to modelling these results has been to consider various urban water
system components in great detail, but in isolation from the rest of the system. This piecewise
approach is suboptimal, since it systematically fails to reveal the relative importance of the
energy consumption and GHG emissions associated with each system component in the context
of the entire urban water system. Hence, it was determined that a new approach to modelling
the energy consumption and GHG emissions associated with urban water systems was
necessary. It was further determined that the value derived from such a model would be greatly
enhanced if it could also model the water consumption and wastewater generation associated
with each system component, such that integrated policies could be developed, aimed at
minimising water consumption, wastewater generation, energy consumption and GHG
emissions concurrently. Hence, the following research question was posed:
How should the relationships between the water consumption, wastewater
generation, energy consumption and GHG emissions associated with the operation
of urban water systems be modelled such that the impact of various changes to the
system configuration made at different spatial scales can be determined within the
context of the entire system?
In this research project, life cycle assessment ideas were employed to develop such a new
modelling methodology. Initially, the approach was developed at the building-scale, such that
the end uses of water present in a selected building and any associated appliances could be
modelled, along with the fraction of the citywide water supply and wastewater systems directly
associated with providing services to that building. This vast breadth of scope was delivered by
considering only the operational life cycle stage of each urban water system component, excluding both the pre- and post-operational life cycle stages of the associated infrastructure.
The value of this pilot model was illustrated by several case studies, focused on residential
buildings connected to the centralised water supply and wastewater systems in Melbourne,
Australia. Later, the approach was extended to the city-scale by using probabilistic distributions
of each input parameter, such that all of the end uses of water present in a city, and all of the
associated building-scale appliances could be modelled, along with the associated complete
water supply and wastewater systems. The value of this city-scale model was illustrated by
applying it to model a hypothetical case study city, resembling Melbourne, Australia in many
ways. Due to a lack of data, this application was limited to the residential sector of the case
study city, along with the fraction of the citywide water supply and wastewater systems directly
associated with providing services to that sector.
The results generated by the pilot and city-scale models showed that the new modelling
methodology could be employed at a wide range of scales to assess the relative importance of
each modelled urban water system component in terms of the specified results. Importantly,
the high resolution of those results enabled the identification of the underlying causes of the
relative importance of each urban water system component, such that efficient and effective
approaches to reducing each result for each system component could be developed.
Interestingly, for the specific case studies investigated, it was revealed that some commonly
neglected system components were actually extremely important, such as domestic hot water
services, a trend found to be largely driven by hot water consumption in showers.