Water Code and Comprehensive Plan to Implement a Revised Water Audit Approach to Identify and Control Water Loss

Federal Register: August 1, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 149)

Proposed Rules

Page 44945-44946

From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]

DOCID:fr01au08-12

DELAWARE RIVER BASIN COMMISSION 18 CFR Part 410

Proposed Amendments to the Water Code and Comprehensive Plan To

Implement a Revised Water Audit Approach to Identify and Control Water

Loss

AGENCY: Delaware River Basin Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of public hearing.

SUMMARY: The Delaware River Basin Commission (``Commission'' or

``DRBC'') will hold a public hearing to receive comments on proposed amendments to the Commission's Water Code and Comprehensive Plan to phase in a requirement for water purveyors to follow a revised water audit approach to identify and control water loss.

DATES: Comments: Written comments must be received by 5 p.m. October 3, 2008.

Meeting and public hearing: The Commission will hold an informational meeting on Wednesday, September 10, 2008 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. The Commission also will hold a public hearing on Thursday,

September 25, 2008 at the Commission's office building. The hearing will begin at 1:30 p.m. and will continue until all those who wish to testify are afforded an opportunity to do so. For more information regarding the procedures for these hearings and comments, see

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.

ADDRESSES: The informational meeting and public hearing will be held at the Commission's office building, which is located at 25 State Police

Drive, West Trenton, New Jersey. Driving directions are available on the Commission's Web site--http://www.drbc.net. Please do not rely on

Internet mapping services as they may not provide accurate directions to the DRBC.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: For further information, please contact Pamela Bush, Commission Secretary and Assistant General

Counsel, Delaware River Basin Commission, at 609-883-9500 ext. 203.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Persons wishing to testify at the public hearing are asked to register in advance by phoning Ms. Paula Schmitt at 609-883-9500, ext. 224.

Written comments may be submitted as follows: If by e-mail, to paula.schmitt@drbc.state.nj.us; if by fax, to Commission Secretary at 609-883-9522; if by U.S. Mail, to Commission Secretary, DRBC, P.O. Box 7360, West Trenton, NJ 08628-0360; or if by overnight mail, to

Commission Secretary, DRBC, 25 State Police Drive, West Trenton, NJ 08628-0360. In all cases, please include the commenter's name, address and affiliation, if any, in the comment document and include ``Water

Audit'' in the subject line.

Background. An estimated 150 million gallons of treated and pressurized water is physically lost from public water supply distribution systems in the Delaware River Basin per day and current methods to account for, track and reduce this loss are inadequate.

The purpose of the proposed amendments is to phase in a program requiring water purveyors to perform a water audit and report their findings in accordance with a new audit structure established by the

American Water Works Association (AWWA) and the International Water

Association (IWA). These new methods are widely regarded as superior to the existing approach, which entails tracking ``unaccounted for water,'' which is no longer considered best practice.

The new water audit methodology provides a rational approach that will facilitate more consistent tracking and reporting than the existing approach allows. It will help water managers and regulators, including the Commission, state agencies, and utility managers, target their efforts to improve water supply efficiency, thereby reducing water withdrawals. Improving water accountability will contribute to achieving objective 1.3.C of the Water Resources Plan for the Delaware

River Basin, which calls for ensuring

Page 44946

maximum feasible efficiency of water use across all sectors.

The Commission's Water Management Advisory Committee (WMAC), which has taken primary responsibility for reviewing the proposed audit methodology and developing these amendments, is composed of representatives from a wide range of public and private sector organizations. WMAC membership includes: Mr. Ferdows Ali, Environmental

Scientist with the New Jersey Department of Agriculture; Ms. Janet L.

Bowers, Executive Director of the Chester County Water Resources

Authority; Mr. Gerald Esposito, President of Tidewater Utilities; Mr.

David Froehlich, of the Wissahickon Valley Watershed Association; Mr.

David Jostenski, Chief of the Water Use Assessment Section of the

Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection; Mr. Mark Hartle, of the Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission, Division of Environmental

Services; Mr. Stewart Lovell, Supervisor of Water Allocations of the

Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control; Mr.

John Mello, of Region II of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency;

Mr. Bruno M. Mercuri, of Mercuri and Associates, Inc.; Dr. Joseph A.

Miri, of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Water

Supply Element; Mr. Robert Molzahn, of the Water Resources Association of the Delaware River Basin; Mr. Howard Neukrug, of the Philadelphia

Water Department; Ms. Mary Ellen Noble, of the Delaware Riverkeeper

Network; Ms. Senobar Safafar, of the New York City Department of

Environmental Protection, Strategic Services Division, Bureau of Water

Supply; Mr. Tom Simms, Director of the Institute of Soil and

Environmental Quality of the University of Delaware DGS Annex; Mr.

Ronald A. Sloto, of the U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources

Division; Ms. Edith Stevens, of the League of Women Voters; and Mr.

Glen Stevens, of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

On May 25, 2004, the WMAC established a subcommittee to investigate the issue of water loss and water accountability in light of new methods proposed by the American Water Works Association (AWWA) and the

International Water Association (IWA). The subcommittee met on four occasions to review the Commission's current policies concerning water loss and water accountability and to discuss the new methods. The

DRBC's current policies are based on the concept of ``unaccounted for water,'' which is no longer considered best practice. The new methods are based upon more precise definitions and more rational accounting procedures that will result in a clearer understanding on the part of utility managers and regulators of the causes of water loss. The new methods will thus facilitate targeted improvements that reduce system water demands, with region-wide benefits. DRBC staff participated in the development of water audit software based on the new accounting methods, in an effort led by the AWWA Water Loss Control Committee

(WLCC).

On March 16, 2005, after listening to a presentation outlining the benefits of the new water accountability methods, the DRBC

Commissioners asked DRBC staff and the WMAC to develop a position statement and policy recommendations for the Commission and to engage water purveyors in the Basin in a pilot study of the newly developed water audit software in order to test the software and solicit feedback.

Six water purveyors from the Delaware River Basin were identified to participate in the nationwide pilot study. The comments and feedback provided to AWWA led to improvements in the software. In March 2006, the software was approved by the AWWA WLCC and was posted on the AWWA

Web site, where it is available at no charge to all users. Links to the software are posted on the water conservation page of the DRBC Web site: http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/policy.htm.

The WMAC and its subcommittee determined that the IWA/AWWA water audit methodology represents an improvement to the Commission's current practices and can lead to multiple benefits for water utilities and other stakeholders. It is anticipated that adoption of the IWA/AWWA approach will:

Improve upon the traditional approach for identifying

``unaccounted for water,'' which lacks standardized terminology and a clearly defined water audit structure.

Provide a rational water audit structure to help identify water losses and improve water supply system efficiency.

Provide meaningful performance indicators to help identify systems with the greatest losses. These indicators allow water utility managers to make reliable comparisons of performance and to identify best practices to control water loss in an economical way.

Identify ways to improve water supply efficiency and thereby reduce water withdrawals that have no beneficial end use.

Help to target efforts to reduce the estimated 150 million gallons per day that is physically lost from public water supply distribution systems in the Basin.

Enhance utility revenues by enabling utility managers to recover the significant revenue that is otherwise lost due to apparent losses such as theft of service, unbilled connections, meter discrepancies and data errors.

Help utility managers and regulators identify real losses

(such as leakage) that waste treated and pressurized water and increase operating costs. Significant real losses indicate opportunities for improved asset management that can reduce the vulnerability of utilities to disruptive water main breaks, other service disruptions and water quality upsets.

Because the water audit approach is relatively new in a regulatory context, the proposed amendments call for phased implementation. Until 2011, the DRBC will promote the voluntary use of the IWA/AWWA water audit program. During this period, information will be gathered from within the Basin and nationwide to assist in the establishment of performance indicators for water loss, which ultimately will replace the ``unaccounted for water'' targets. If approved, the proposed amendments will require water purveyors to perform an annual water audit conforming to the IWA/AWWA methodology, beginning in calendar year 2012.

The proposed amendments also require changes in the way data pertaining to water loss are collected by the state agencies and shared with DRBC.

The text of the proposed Water Code amendments is available on the

DRBC Web site, drbc.net. A copy can also be obtained by contacting

Paula Schmitt at 609-883-9500, ext. 224.

Dated: July 28, 2008.

Pamela M. Bush,

Commission Secretary.

FR Doc. E8-17661 Filed 7-31-08; 8:45 am

BILLING CODE 6360-01-P

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