Water (Jan 2020)

An Analysis of Electricity Consumption Patterns in the Water and Wastewater Sectors in South East England, UK

  • Aman Majid,
  • Iliana Cardenes,
  • Conrad Zorn,
  • Tom Russell,
  • Keith Colquhoun,
  • René Bañares-Alcantara,
  • Jim W. Hall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w12010225
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 225

Abstract

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The water and wastewater sectors of England and Wales (E&W) are energy-intensive. Although E&W’s water sector is of international interest, in particular due to the early experience with privatisation, for the time being, few published data on energy usage exist. We analysed telemetry energy-use data from Thames Water Utilities Ltd. (TWUL), the largest water and wastewater company in the UK, which serves one of the largest mega-cities in the world, London. In our analysis, we: (1) break down energy use into their components; (2) present a statistical approach to handling seasonal and random cycles in data; and (3) derive energy-intensity (kWh m−3) metrics and compare them with other regions in the world. We show that electricity use in the sector grew by around 10.8 ± 0.4% year−1 as the utility coped with growing demands and stormwater flooding. The energy-intensity of water services in each of the utility’s service zone was measured in the range 0.46−0.92 kWh m−3. Plans to improve the efficiency of the system could yield benefits in lower energy-intensity, but the overall energy saving would be temporary as external pressures from population and climate change are driving up water and energy use.

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