Title: MONITORING LEAKAGE AND WATER EFFICIENCY PLANS
1WATER CONSERVATION AND DEMAND MANAGEMENT
MONITORING LEAKAGE AND WATER EFFICIENCY PLANS
IAN STEPHENSOffice of Water Services
NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY, 4 JUNE 2003
2AGENDA
- Percentages - how to mislead people
- The role of Ofwat
- History of leakage regulation
- Approach to leakage measurement
- Target setting
- Tripartite study
- Thames Water
- Regulatory powers
- Stakeholder interaction - political influence
- The efficient use of water
3PERCENTAGES - HOW TO MISLEAD PEOPLE
- What do you think the average level of leakage is
in England and Wales?
4- In 2001-02 the answer could have been
- 3414.3 Ml/d
- 22
- 16
- 145.6 l/p/d
- 10.3 m3/km/d
- 107.7 l/p/d
- Depending on what you measure and how you do it
5- Why we dont use percentages
- Example
- Compare Sydney Water with average England and
Wales company - Sydney Water, Losses/Input 11
- England Wales, Losses/Input 16
6- Example cont
- BUT losses are independent of input
- Input depends largely on customer demand
- Swapping the input figures between the two gives
- Sydney Water 19
- England Wales 9
7- Therefore s unhelpful for comparisons
- 1996 House of Commons Environment Committee on
Water conservation and supply, stated... - Water companies should not present leakage in
percentages - Losses should be shown in Megalitres per day
(Ml/d), Litres per property per day (l/p/d)
cubic metres per kilometre of mains per day
(m3/km/d) - Allows for comparisons between companies to be
made - More later.
8THE ROLE OF OFWAT
- Economic regulator
- Responsible for setting price limits
- 22 companies providing clean water services
- To 23 million connected properties
- With a population of 53 million
- Companies operate in regional monopolies
- Has overseen 25 above inflation price rises
since 1989 (12.3 decrease in 2000) - To fund 50 billion pound investment programme to
2005
9- Ofwat is the office of the Director General of
Water Services -
- Philip Fletcher
- Director General
- His primary duties as economic regulator for the
water industry of England and Wales are laid down
by national government in the Water Industry Act
1991
10- Director Generals primary duties
- To ensure that the funtions of a water and
sewerage company, as specified in the Act, are
properly carried out - To ensure that companies are able to finance
their funtions, in particular by securing a
reasonable rate of return on their capital - Leakage duties
- Director General has a duty to promote economy
and efficiency by the companies (throughout their
business) - The companies have a duy to develop and maintain
an efficient and economical system of water
supply
11HISTORY OF LEAKAGE REGULATION
- Leakage has always been reported to Ofwat
annually in JR - Focus on water delivered rather than
unaccounted for water (report 26) - First public statements in June 1992
12- Water delivered report 1990-91 (published Jun 92)
- Explained Ofwat policy
- League tables (anonymised results)
- Regionally grouped
- Focus on methodology and data quality
13- In the report the Director General indicated that
water delivered to customers would form a key
output measure for monitoring performance of
customers - Previously water into supply had been key measure
14- Data quality in 1991
- 18 companies were unable to assign a confidence
grade to water delivered, 5 more assessed it as
needs improvement or worse - probably an over optimistic assessment
15- By the next year we had moved from drawing
attention to data quality and were discussing the
best way to express leakage - We decided that per unit length was better than
of distribution input but explained that this
favoured rural companies
16- Later in 1992 published Cost of water delivered
to customers 1991-92 - No league tables but attributable results on
leakage
17- Made some comment about leakage economics
- ...would not be in the interest of customers to
attempt to push leakage control beyond the point
where additional costs of control equal the extra
benefits that result
18- And
- Companies should have due regard to the costs of
water lost and make an appropriate decision about
the spending required to control leakage - principles founded in report 26 issued in 1980
19- In 1993 report on cost of water delivered started
to draw attention to the water delivered
components and the variation inherent - PCC
- unmeasured non household use
- supply pipe leakage
- meter under registration
20- Explained that we were interested in leakage
because - Ofwat has responsibility to ensure that companies
are efficient in their use of water - Comparative efficiency studies depend on
realistic estimates of supply pipe leakage - An equitable tariff balance can rely on estimates
of supply pipe leakage
21- Went on to use the term Economic Level of
Leakage - Then said that because ELL varied with local
costs and system condition we did not set leakage
targets - Report moved away from per Km measure to litres
per property
22- Report did not comment on comparative performance
on leakage but raised some concerns about pcc
variance - The next years report (1993-94) carried on in
the same theme - encouraging the adoption of MLE
methodology on leakage
23- By the following year it was clear that there
were public concerns about leakage levels - Ofwat said that it would not expect to push
companies below ELL as this would impose costs
and looked to other methods of conserving water
24- Ofwat was now encouraging companies to develop
consumption monitors (like Severn Trent) - Recommended reconciliation of night flow and
integrated flow leakage results - Pointed to some reasons for differences in
leakage figures - but still no naming and shaming
25- At the same time as all this the hot summer of
1995 was causing problems - Yorkshire was tankering water
- Companies were using drought orders to obtain
more resources - Hosepipe bans and drought orders were used to
restrict consumption
26- Severe supply problems at Yorkshire Water
- And press revelations that leakage was over 30
of distribution input
Yorkshire Water
27- Since privatisation in 1989, until 1995, leakage
rose in England and Wales
Leakage performance 1992-93 to 1994-95
28- The traumatic events of the summer resulted in
Ofwat publishing a special report Leakage of
Water in England and Wales in May 1996 - For the first time there was direct criticism of
specific companies - Companies were told that they should set and
publish leakage targets that were acceptable to
Ofwat
29- In the following year (October 1997) Ofwat
published its first annual report specifically on
leakage and water efficiency - More use of league tables
- More specific criticism of individual company
performance - Leakage targets published for the current and
following years
30- During the same year (May 1997) the new
government convened the water summit - Stressed the importance of reducing leakage and
improving the efficient use of water - Ten point plan
31- DG will set tough mandatory leakage targets
- Free leakage detection and repair for domestic
supply pipes - Companies to get statutory duty to conserve water
in carrying out their functions - Companies to promote water efficiency with
vigour, imagination and enthusiasm - Companies to consider role in Government
Environment Task Force - New water regulations will take water efficiency
into account
32- Government will review RV charging, disconnection
policy and metering policy - Companies to accept licence amendment to allow
drought related compensation - Companies should publish data on leakage and
water efficiency performance - Government will review abstraction charging
regime to ensure environment given full weight
33- Since 1995 progress has been more obvious - some
debate over the reasons for the enhanced
performance - Drought brought home to most companies the
inertia of leakage improvements - New era of economic and political realism
combined with enhanced technology
34Political comment
- This is great news for customers
- This is impressive progress. I want to go
further, helped by more innovation and better
technology. I look forward very much to working
with the regulator, the water industry and
customers to achieve this. - John Prescott - August 2000
35- Continue to monitor leakage through June Returns
- Publish out-turn in a press notice issued in
early July - Contains results and current targets
- Details of regulatory action
36APPROACH TO LEAKAGE MEASUREMENT
- A definition of leakage
- the loss of water from the supply network,
which escapes other than through a controlled
action
- Total leakage
- Drinking water
- From the water treatment works to the customers
internal stop tap - NOT untreated water or losses on customers
internal plumbing
37 38- 79 of domestic customers in England and Wales
are not metered - Other unmeasured components of the water balance
- e.g. water taken legally but not billed for,
water taken illegally, operational use,
unmeasured non-households - Distribution input - (measured components
estimates of unmeasured components) leakage? - Scope for overstating estimated components and
therefore underestimating leakage! - Another way?
39- Allows for independent estimation of leakage
- Using measured minimum nightlines
- In districts of 1000-3000 properties (DMA)
- Principal flow will be leakage (allow for
legitimate use) - Gives measurement and independent estimates of
all water balance components - Summing these should equal distribution input,
BUT - Because of uncertainty in estimates this will not
be exact - Companies use statistical techniques to
redistribute imbalance - Range of imbalances 0.1 to 4.2 in 2001-02
- Average 1.5
40TARGET SETTING
- Closely linked to ELL analysis and SDB situation
- 2001-02 targets now in place are no longer
mandatory where a robust ELL exists - Maintain incentive to produce robust ELL
41- First targets published in May 1996
- Mandatory targets set out for the first time in
October 1997 for the 1998-99 year - a 16
reduction overall - Targets based on supply position and actual
leakage level
42Process for target setting is to discuss the
Ofwat proposals with EA and DETR before sending
them in draft to companies 1996 saw first
robust Economic Level of Leakage appraisal
(Yorkshire Water) Ofwat began to set targets
with reference to robust ELLs
43 Aim was to get Companies to ELL by end of
2002-03 After this expect general downward trend
because of Technology improvements Reducing
costs Growth in demand
44TARGET SETTING - RESULTS
- Results.
- Targets set since 1997
- Enough water saved to meet daily needs of over
12.5 million domestic customers - Obvious benefit for the environment
45- Leakage performance 1994-95 to 2001-02
46- Leakage performance 1994-95 to 2001-02
47Aim was to get Companies to ELL by end of
2002-03. Progress so far...
48More on Thames later.
49What happens post 2002-03?
Ofwat would like to leave leakage management
to the companies - incentive regulation Taking
a medium to long term view Need a solution that
satisfies all stakeholders Companies Regulato
rs- Economic and Environmental Politicians Cus
tomers
50The Tripartite Study
Jointly funded by Ofwat, DEFRA and EA Let to
WRc Main objective to consider how companies
should undertake a fully integrated appraisal of
the financial, social and environmental aspects
of their leakage reduction and other operations
to ensure the efficient use of water resources
now and in the future by all abstractors. Indus
try participation has been important
51Tripartite study outcomes
- Published March 2002
- Recommendation of how to produce a best practice
ELL - Recommended list of Leakage performance
indicators - A discussion of alternative target setting option
52Approach for PR04
- Results of consultation published in this years
leakage report (having a new focus on supply /
demand) - PR04 treatment of leakage will be based on the
Tripartite study results - Leakage economics will be focused at the zonal
level - Consistent with a holistic supply demand approach
- ELL guidance will appear in the draft Business
Plan
53Summary
- Tripartite study conclusions will feed into PR04
in terms of supply/demand and leakage assessments - Leakage and supply/demand are indisputably linked
- Company submission on both issues must be wholly
consistent
54ECONOMIC LEVELS OF LEAKAGE - DEFINED
- Ofwats annual leakage report (www.ofwat.co.uk)
states - The water companies of England and Wales manage
water distribution networks with a total length
of more than 300,000km. In addition there are
more than 23million connections to properties,
which all have the capacity to leak. Reducing
leakage to zero would be virtually impossible and
enormously expensive - So the aim in England and Wales has been to
achieve economic levels of leakage
55The Economic level of leakage (ELL) - a
definition
The level of leakage at which it would cost more
to make further reductions than to produce the
water from another source, is known as the
ELL Operating at ELL means that the total cost
to the customer of supplying water is minimised
and companies are operating efficiently
56ECONOMIC LEVELS OF LEAKAGE - BEST PRACTICE
- Best practice defined in Ofwat commissioned
study, - Future approaches to leakage target setting for
water companies in England and Wales - - Published March 2002 (www.ofwat.co.uk)
57- ELL target setting process map
58- ELL is set within the context of the supply
demand balance for water - Reduction on leakage reduction in water treated
for supply - May reduce capital expenditure in the planning
period - Potential environmental benefits
- Two options
- Least cost planning
- Marginal cost of water
59REGULATORY POWERS
- Actions taken by Ofwat - the regulatory
escalator - Pragmatic targets
- Extra reporting
- Specific investigations
- Voluntary undertakings
- Enforcement orders
- Special administration
60Thames Water
- Concern about leakage at Thames for many years
- Highest leakage in industry and now rising
- Thames could not explain 7.2 of its water put
into supply - Thames also has security of supply problems in
London
61Thames Water cont...
- Thames argue it has a uniquely tough operating
environment - Leakage control is not necessarily the most
efficient way to deal with its security of supply
problem - The increasing water balance imbalance is due to
increased demand not just rising leakage
62Thames Water... The Agreed Steps
- Develop a robust ELL assessment and achieve it by
2003-04 - Establish a robust water balance for the whole
company - Implement an acceptable resource plan to achieve
target headroom by 2003-04 (and maintain it) - All of these are inextricably linked
63STAKEHOLDER INTERACTION - POLITICAL INFLUENCE
- Ofwat must be aware of current political thinking
- New Ministers can have different views
- Ministers view leakage as bad
- Working under guidance that leakage should not be
allowed to rise - Considering new powers for Ministers to set
targets - Other policies can influence leakage - ie street
works - Ofwat try to influence Government thinking
64- Close interation with environmental regulator -
The Environment Agency - Responsible for abstarction licensing and water
resources - Can also influence Government
- Media portrayal important
- Other intested parties can influence debate
- i.e leaks water trees!
- Ofwat look to balance all views with objective of
minimising costs to customers
65Leakage summary
- Evolution of current regulatory practice
- Origins of leakage targets
- Regulatory process now
- Future of targets
66The Efficient Use of Water
67History
- Duty to promote efficient use of water introduced
in 1996 - We approved companies initial strategies in
April 1997 - Annual monitoring of companies through the June
return process - Analysis published annually in security of
supply, leakage and efficient use of water report
68History (Contd)
- Companies submitted five-year water efficiency
plans in July 2000 - We published assessment in RD7/01, may 2001
- NAO report on leakage and efficient use of water,
December 2000 concluded that - Progress made in offering advice, free metering,
free supply pipe repairs and water saving devices
69History (Contd)
- Noted uncertainties over savings
- Need for sharing of information/research
- PAC report indicated that
- Ofwat should identify the most effective
efficient use of water measures
70Five Year Plans
- We advised that plans should specifically set out
strategies on - Cistern device provision and use
- Household information, especially self-audit
- Advice for institutions and schools
- Long-term educational strategies
71Compliance Criteria
- We use four criteria in assessing companies
compliance with statutory duty - Is there an efficient pricing framework?
- Is there a long-term education programme?
- Is company activity economic?
- Is promotion directed to those customers who
benefit most?
72Five Year Plans (Contd)
- Overall satisfied - all companies meet acceptable
minimum - Only some have really taken a strategic approach
- Want companies to set efficient use of water in
context of overall supply/demand balance - Different levels of activity appropriate for
different companies
73RD7/01 - Main Points
- Emphasised that efficient use of water is a
long-term activity - Attitudes may take time to change
- Further work is necessary to clarify costs and
benefits of efficient use of water - UKWIR project on best practice in measuring
savings - Companies also expected to do their own research
74RD7/01 - Assessment of Plans
- EA and Watervoice regions (previously CSCs) given
opportunity to comment - Assessment took into account
- Supply/demand balance
- Scope for further leakage reduction
- Level of activity in recent years
- Different levels of activity appropriate for
different companies
752001-02 Report
- Published 23 October 2002
- Key messages
- We focus on water companies activity
- We expect a minimum level of activity from all
companies - We expect companies to focus on what works best
76Twin Track
- Key element in maintaining SD balance
- Demand management options need to be equitable
with supply options - Reproducible, transferable, accurate, robust,
cost comparable and sustainable
77What Are We Doing Now?
- Working with the industry to improve
understanding of cost-effectiveness - UKWIR study
- EA water efficiency awards
- Revising JR03 guidance
78UKWIR - Best Practice in Measuring the Effects of
Efficient Use of Water Measures
- Phase 1 Framework for best practice, 10
criterion - 1 Project management
- 2 Study approach
- 3 Monitoring period
- 4 Sample size
- 5 Sample composition
- 6 Control sample
- 7 Data collection
- 8 Data analysis
- 9 Audibility
- 10 Statistical analysis
-