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2020-057 2019 Water Loss AuditDate: June 5, 2020 Report No. 2020-057       INFORMAL STAFF REPORT TO MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL SUBJECT: 2019 Water Loss Audit EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Water Utilities staff completes a water loss audit annually in accordance with Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) regulations and industry best practices. This year’s audit identified water losses similar to recent years and identified opportunities to improve these metrics in the future. BACKGROUND: TWDB requires the completion of water loss audits annually by all water utilities serving more than 3,300 customers. Beyond State requirements, a water loss audit program presents opportunities for better resource conservation and improved fiscal responsibility. For many years, staff has executed water loss audits to standards over and above TWDB minimum requirements in pursuit of a healthier water utility. Water loss audit standards within the industry have continued to evolve, which provides ongoing opportunities for the improvement of individual audits and has led TWDB to refine their water loss audit framework. DISCUSSION: As a primary function, Denton’s water loss audit separates water use into three categories: (1) authorized consumption, (2) apparent loss, and (3) real loss. (1) Authorized consumption consists of all water that has been authorized for use by the utility and its customers. Authorized consumption includes, but is not limited to, water used for residential and commercial uses, firefighting, municipal landscape watering, pipe flushing, city offices, and water treatment facility use. Authorized consumption is all the water the utility gave permission to a business, individual, or itself to use. Staff previously identified an opportunity to improve water volume estimations for new pipe flushing and is implementing new methods accordingly. (2) Apparent loss represents water that was not accurately measured and/or not recorded at a customer meter and therefore not billed due to meter inaccuracy, theft, and billing waivers. This category represents a loss in revenue, and since customer meters hold customers accountable for their water use, it also represents a detriment to water conservation efforts. The water meter maintenance and replacement program works to offset this loss and maintain reasonable accuracy in customer meters. Date: June 5, 2020 Report No. 2020-057       (3) Real loss represents water that left the water distribution system without serving a purpose. This is largely a result of leakage. Staff estimates water lost through known main breaks and leaks, and the remaining unaccounted-for volume is assumed to be undiscovered leakage. The city implemented programs to repair known leaks and search for undiscovered leaks. To the extent that this program is financially offset by the value of water saved, staff can continue to reduce real loss through leak detection and repair. The waterline replacement program in Water Distribution also plays a large part in this figure, as they aim to replace the pipes which are most likely to break. Staff identified an opportunity to improve water volume estimations on known water main leaks and breaks and is implementing new steps accordingly. In a benchmarking study of real and apparent loss, Denton sits near the middle of Region C utilities in both per connection and per capita measurements as shown below. Date: June 5, 2020 Report No. 2020-057       The water loss audit framework also includes calculation of the Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI), which is a measure of real loss adjusted for the size of each utility. This metric is useful for benchmarking due to its size considerations. ILI compares real loss to a theoretical unavoidable leakage unique to each utility based on their size. A value of 1 would suggest a utility has avoided all possible leakage. There is no upper limit to this metric. Denton’s ILI in 2019 was 2.13, which places us in the top 40% of Region C utilities as shown below. Date: June 5, 2020 Report No. 2020-057       In the 2019 Water Loss Audit, staff verified existing concerns with the accuracy of large water meters at Denton’s water production plants. Such accuracy errors have inflated the total amount of water produced, causing losses to appear to rise over time. Out of the four affected meters, two have been replaced, and one of the remaining two will be replaced in 2020. Staff is implementing steps to validate the accuracy of these meters and improve water accounting within the water production plants. Improved accuracy of these meters will likely result in reduced estimations of water loss in future audits. CONCLUSION: Denton has continued to maintain a competitive water loss management program and has implemented new steps to continue to improve the program. ATTACHMENT(S): Water Audit Presentation 2019.pdf (pptx as pdf) STAFF CONTACT: Tyler Dawson, Manager of Asset Management 940-349-8944 Tyler.Dawson@CityofDenton.com Water Loss Audit 2019 JUNE 8, 2020 1PUB20-103 Water Loss Audit Authorized Consumption + Apparent Losses + Real Losses Total Water Supplied 2PUB20-103 Water Produced Water Exported Water Supplied Authorized Consumption Fire Protection Unbilled Water Loss Apparent Loss Unauthorized Consumption Real Loss Systematic Data Error System Operations The Water Audit Tree –Categorizing Water Use 3 Main Breaks Unaccounted Billed Residential Commercial Meter Inaccuracy PUB20-103 Real Loss Real loss is water lost through distribution system leakage and excessive pressure •Main breaks and leaks •Undiscovered leakage •Background leakage •Other unidentified losses 4PUB20-103 Effects of Real Loss Real losses are indicators of system health ◦These losses should be minimized within economic reason ◦Real losses are priced at the marginal cost of water acquisition and treatment Denton FY 2019: 607.20 MG/ 9.40% 5PUB20-103 Apparent Loss Apparent loss is water that was not read accurately by a meter •Water meter inaccuracy •Unauthorized consumption •Systematic data errors 6PUB20-103 Effects of Apparent Loss Apparent losses are indicators of fiscal health ◦Inaccurate meters and theft reduce revenue ◦Apparent losses are priced at the retail volume cost of water Denton FY 2019: 197.42 MG/ 3.09% 7PUB20-103 Unbilled Authorized Fire Protection is provided as an unbilled service ◦Fire sprinkler systems ◦Fire engine use System operation often requires flushing water mains ◦Cleaning new pipes after installation ◦Removing old water from low flow pipes ◦Flow rate testing and water quality sampling 8PUB20-103 Water Produced 6,476 Water Exported 76 Water Supplied 6,398 Authorized Consumption 5,593 Fire Protection 1Unbilled 78 Water Loss 805 Apparent Loss 197 Unauthorized Consumption 16 Real Loss 607 Systematic Data Error 5 System Operations 77 The Water Audit Tree –Categorizing Water Use 9 Main Breaks 40 Unaccounted 567 Billed 5,515 Residential 2,628 Commercial 2,887 Meter Inaccuracy 176 volumes in MG PUB20-103 Cost of Water Loss Real Loss -$209,487 / 607.20 MG ◦Real loss is priced at the variable cost of treating 1,000 gallons of water: $0.35 ◦Cost of real loss will increase in the future when Denton acquires additions to the water supply Apparent loss -$947,621 / 197.42 MG ◦Apparent loss is priced at the average retail cost of 1,000 gallons of water: $4.80 ◦This amount is offset by our proactive meter replacement and calibration program 10PUB20-103 Benchmarking Data Points Real Loss ◦System Health Apparent Loss ◦Fiscal health Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) ◦Comparison to theoretical minimum leakage 11PUB20-103 Benchmarking Considerations System Size ◦Growth ◦Water Quality / topology Infrastructure Age Audit Validation 12PUB20-103 13 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 Gallons Per Connection Per DayReal and Apparent Loss per Connection Across Region C Real Loss Apparent Loss PUB20-103 14 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 Gallons Per Capita Per Day (GPCD)Total Loss per Capita Across Region C PUB20-103 Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) Calculated as total real losses over theoretical minimum leakage An indicator of a utility’s effectiveness in managing leaks Theoretical minimum of 1 ◦Denton FY 2019: = 2.13 15PUB20-103 16 0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 6.00 7.00 8.00 9.00 10.00 AWWA Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) Across Region C Infrastructure Leakage Index -Technical Performance Indicator 1.0 –3.0 3.0 –5.0 5.0 –8.0 > 8 PUB20-103 17PUB20-103 Implementation Steps ✓Continue meter replacement program ✓Continue leak detection program with improved technology ✓Continue use of improved main break water loss estimates o Improve volume estimates for new line flushing o Create and implement Mass Balance Worksheet for plants 18PUB20-103 Questions / Comments Water Utilities 19PUB20-103