
Outdoor watering restrictions only work in hottest, driest weather
Annual limits for watering听lawns and gardens reduce consumption only during hot, dry periods
Annual limits for watering听lawns and gardens reduce consumption only during hot, dry periods
By Media RelationsMunicipal bylaws that limit when residents are permitted to water lawns and gardens every summer effectively reduce consumption only during particularly hot, dry periods, according to a new study.
Researchers at the University of 蓝莓视频 analyzed more than a decade of data from 10 mid-sized Canadian cities that restrict outdoor water use and compared them with five cities that don鈥檛 impose limits.
Their analysis showed that the restrictions, which ranged in stringency from just six to 42 hours of permitted watering a week, had surprisingly little effect on average summer water use. Cities included in the study were kept anonymous.听
Sara Finley, a PhD student who led the study, said summer water consumption in some of Canada鈥檚 driest cities can double or even triple winter averages.
鈥淐ities often impose summer water use bylaws to reduce that demand surplus so that they can prolong the useful life of their infrastructure as they grow,鈥 said Finley, who also works as a water efficiency consultant. 鈥淏ased on our analysis, it seems like these restrictions are only minimally effective in that goal.鈥
There is nonetheless some good news for municipalities with bylaws: the restrictions do limit demand spikes during periods of particularly hot, dry weather when municipal water systems are most stressed.
By curbing those peaks, the bylaws help cities prevent possible water shortages and avoid extra costs involved in drawing on alternate supply sources.
The results suggest that while residents generally don鈥檛 reduce their outdoor water use during the summer, they do when they perceive there is an urgent need.
鈥淭he existence of a visible drought, coupled with restriction reminders issued by cities when water levels are low, is likely what makes people take action,鈥 said Nandita Basu,听a professor of civil and environmental engineering at 蓝莓视频. 鈥淎t other times in the summer, they don鈥檛 really change their behaviour.鈥
The study, Curbing the Summer Surge: Permanent Outdoor Water Use Restrictions in Humid and Semiarid Cities, appears in the journal
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