Research Brief
A New Tool Can Help Commercial-Building Owners Make Better Water-Efficiency Decisions
Oct 21, 2007
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This report presents an analytical framework and describes a spreadsheet-based tool to help commercial building owners make reasoned judgments about various water-efficiency investment options. The framework considers the costs that are typically incurred when improving efficiency and seeks to include many tangible financial benefits. Specifically, it considers the avoided water, wastewater, and energy costs realized through increased water efficiency and allows the user to specify tiered utility rates that can have a significant impact on investment decisions. As future water savings from efficiency investments cannot always be forecast with certainty, the model includes an innovative scenario-analysis capability to consider variable increases in utility prices. Although the costs and water savings of efficiency devices may also be uncertain, the framework described here assumes that these characteristics are known with certainty. To demonstrate, the report provides a case study of two configurations of the current RAND headquarters building (one with current fixtures and one with older ones). Results for any efficiency package upgrading pre-1992 fixtures suggested highly favorable investment returns, especially upgrading all devices to the 1992 standard and replacing urinals with non-water-using designs. For the building configuration with post-1992 fixtures, only efficiency packages that include replacing existing urinals with non-water-using models performed well.
Chapter One
Introduction
Chapter Two
Assessing Water Efficiency’s Value to a Building Owner
Chapter Three
Selected Water-Efficiency Opportunities in Commercial Buildings
Chapter Four
A New Tool for Evaluating Efficiency Investments
Chapter Five
Case Study Using the Building Water Efficiency Analysis Model
Chapter Six
Conclusion
Appendix A
Building Water Efficiency Analysis Model User’s Guide
Appendix B
Case Study: Water Usage and Cost Assumptions
This research was sponsored by the Jane and Marc Nathanson Family Foundation and conducted under the auspices of the Environment, Energy, and Economic Development Program (EEED) within RAND Infrastructure, Safety, and Environment (ISE).
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