Water use and efficiency
Tips for saving water
Minimising water use in your business can require financial
commitment. However, many measures are cheap and simple to
implement and could potentially save you up to 30 per cent of your
water costs. You could:
- Only use water when you need to. Record how much water your
business uses on a daily or weekly basis to understand your
demands. This will help you decide the best ways to save water and
money. If you abstract water it will also help you comply with the
conditions of your authorisation.
- Educate staff about implementing water-efficiency measures. You
could include their roles and responsibilities in a water policy
statement, eg to report leaking taps straight away.
- Get buy-in from management and involve staff with
responsibility for facilities, finance and operations in water
minimisation measures from the outset. This may form part of an
existing environmental policy
- Appoint a member of staff to monitor water use and identify
minimisation opportunities, eg by doing a regular walk-round survey
of your business and reading water meters. If parts of your
business use a lot of water, consider installing sub-meters.
- Buy water efficient new equipment. This may mean a larger
initial investment, but it will pay off in the long term. See the
page in this guideline: Finance and support for water efficiency
measures.
- Protect against cold weather-related leaks by insulating pipes
and checking them regularly.
- Investigate alternative water sources, eg harvesting rainwater
through a roof catchment or reusing wastewater from wash basins and
showers, known as greywater. Once captured, you can use the water
where non-drinking water is required, for example to flush
toilets.
- Fit water-minimising controls, eg push taps, low-flush toilets,
flow regulators or restrictors. The payback period for installing
flush controls on urinals can be as little as five weeks.
- Review your plans to reduce water use, ideally at least once a
year.
- Consider treating your wastewater to reuse it for industrial
uses, toilet flushing and irrigation which do not require water fit
for drinking. Using less treated drinking water will save you
money.
- Check your meter size is appropriate to the amount of water you
use. If it is larger than you need, you will pay your water
supplier more than necessary.
- Check your meter location and the supplies it measures, eg in
industrial and business parks where a neighbouring business may be
supplied through your meter. Also check that your meter serial
number matches the number on your bills and that you are being
billed for your own meter.
- Fix drips and leaks as quickly as possible.
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