The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change

Denver Water serves 1.5 million people in the metropolitan area of Denver, Colorado, USA. Relying on runoff from mountain watersheds, its water supply is obviously sensitive to precipitation, but so is its energy footprint. We analyzed Denver Water's annual energy use and water use alongside lo...

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Main Authors: Robert B. Sowby, Annelise Capener
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-03-01
Series:Energy Nexus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772427122001218
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author Robert B. Sowby
Annelise Capener
author_facet Robert B. Sowby
Annelise Capener
author_sort Robert B. Sowby
collection DOAJ
description Denver Water serves 1.5 million people in the metropolitan area of Denver, Colorado, USA. Relying on runoff from mountain watersheds, its water supply is obviously sensitive to precipitation, but so is its energy footprint. We analyzed Denver Water's annual energy use and water use alongside local precipitation over a 20-year period from 1995 to 2014. Energy use generally trended opposite to precipitation: In dry years the system used more energy than in wet years, even when the energy use was normalized by water volume. The data suggest that the system needs to compensate for less precipitation by expending more energy, presumably by supplying water from more distant or more energy-intensive water sources. A regression model indicates that a 1 cm decrease in annual precipitation equates to 275,000 kWh of additional energy use and that typical interannual variability in precipitation accounts for 11% of Denver Water's energy footprint. The analysis highlights implications for altered energy footprints as water utilities respond to new precipitation patterns in a changing climate.
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spelling doaj.art-769fc98f5cee4b97a60a5a7c74bfcfdd2023-03-19T04:38:52ZengElsevierEnergy Nexus2772-42712023-03-019100166The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate changeRobert B. Sowby0Annelise Capener1Corresponding author.; Department of Civil and Construction Engineering, Brigham Young University, United StatesDepartment of Civil and Construction Engineering, Brigham Young University, United StatesDenver Water serves 1.5 million people in the metropolitan area of Denver, Colorado, USA. Relying on runoff from mountain watersheds, its water supply is obviously sensitive to precipitation, but so is its energy footprint. We analyzed Denver Water's annual energy use and water use alongside local precipitation over a 20-year period from 1995 to 2014. Energy use generally trended opposite to precipitation: In dry years the system used more energy than in wet years, even when the energy use was normalized by water volume. The data suggest that the system needs to compensate for less precipitation by expending more energy, presumably by supplying water from more distant or more energy-intensive water sources. A regression model indicates that a 1 cm decrease in annual precipitation equates to 275,000 kWh of additional energy use and that typical interannual variability in precipitation accounts for 11% of Denver Water's energy footprint. The analysis highlights implications for altered energy footprints as water utilities respond to new precipitation patterns in a changing climate.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772427122001218Water energy nexusClimate changeWater supplyWater utilities
spellingShingle Robert B. Sowby
Annelise Capener
The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
Energy Nexus
Water energy nexus
Climate change
Water supply
Water utilities
title The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
title_full The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
title_fullStr The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
title_full_unstemmed The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
title_short The influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of Denver's water supply: A 20-year analysis and implications for climate change
title_sort influence of precipitation on the energy footprint of denver s water supply a 20 year analysis and implications for climate change
topic Water energy nexus
Climate change
Water supply
Water utilities
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772427122001218
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