Smart-Meter Enabled Estimation and Prediction of Outdoor Residential Water Consumption
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Date
2018-01-22
Authors
Platsko, Valerie
Advisor
van Beek, Peter
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
Smart meter technology allows frequent measurements of water consumption at a
household level. This greater availability of data allows improved analysis of patterns
of residential water consumption, which is important for demand management and
targeting conservation efforts. The dataset in this thesis includes 8,000 single fam-
ily residences in Abbotsford, British Columbia from 2012–2013, and contains hourly
measurements of water consumption recorded by smart meters installed in 2010. This
work focuses on identifying outdoor consumption due to its contribution to peak de-
mand during the summer, which is important because of concerns about strain on
infrastructure in Abbotsford. This research shows that outdoor water consumption
can be robustly identified from hourly measurement of total water consumption by
determining an upper threshold on plausible indoor usage, and that this estimated
outdoor water consumption is consistent with seasonal patterns of water consumption
identified in previous work, with the timing of restrictions on outdoor watering, and
with household size. The research also includes regression tree-based models for pre-
dicting next-hour water consumption, however the predictability of this consumption
is limited. In contrast to previous work, there is little correlation between outdoor
consumption and demographic factors such as income. Outdoor consumption shows
a large amount of individual variability, with 8.6% of households accounting for 50%
of the total outdoor usage. This limits the predictability of outdoor consumption,
but also highlights the importance of identifying this consumption for each household
to allow for targeted conservation efforts.