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Water Policy Consultation

The Irish Gov­ern­ment has launched a con­sul­ta­tion process (Jan­u­ary 2012) con­cern­ing water pol­icy, includ­ing issues of water meter­ing and water rates, as well as plans to set up a new national water util­ity. It is invit­ing responses to its posi­tion paper, “Reform of the Water Sec­tor in Ire­land”, until 24 Feb­ru­ary 2012. The doc­u­ment offers a use­ful win­dow on gov­ern­ment think­ing and on the var­i­ous pres­sures and prob­lems that may well ulti­mately shape policy.

The posi­tion paper lays out gov­ern­ment plans to form a national water util­ity which will man­age all issues relat­ing to domes­tic and com­mer­cial water sup­ply, address envi­ron­men­tal and climage change issues, over­see imple­men­ta­tion of aspects of EU pol­icy (impor­tant dead­lines are loom­ing) and respond to changes in pop­u­la­tion nation­ally and in urban areas.

The doc­u­ment also restates the gov­ern­ment ideal of imple­ment­ing water meters in every house­hold in the coun­try, and to charge users by usage beyond a cer­tain free quota of water per house­hold. Sev­eral pres­sures emerge here.

First, while the goal is to bring in rev­enue that will meet the cost of our water sup­ply, sup­ply­ing and installing water meters will itself be costly and time con­sum­ing. The doc­u­ment con­sid­ers the pos­si­bil­ity of sim­ply intro­duc­ing a flat-rate charge, but recog­nises that, though this would require no gov­ern­ment invest­ment in meter­ing, it would not address the need to con­serve already lim­ited water sup­plies. A sec­ond option con­sid­ered is to spread instal­la­tion over a period of ten years or more, with a flat-rate charged being imposed on those with­out meters. (100,000 house­hold per year until 2021 would leave 500,000 homes unmetered.)

A fur­ther idea is to have an opt-in sys­tem where house­holds could choose to have a water meter installed, bear at least some costs of the instal­la­tion, and claw back some of those costs by acheiv­ing water usage reduc­tions. The idea is that it would prove cheaper in the long-run to install a water meter than to remain on a higher flat-rate charge. The doc­u­ment acknowl­edges that this would be socially divi­sive — more avail­able to those with greater means. Finally, the pos­si­bil­ity of installing meters only in cer­tain cat­e­gories of prop­erty is con­sid­ered, e.g. in new houses, sold houses, rental prop­er­ties, etc.

(A rather dif­fer­ent option con­sid­ered, but largely dis­missed, is to focus on repair­ing the exist­ing water net­work to elim­i­nate leak­age. How­ever, the high costs mean that sav­ings would be sig­nif­i­cantly less than the rev­enue gen­er­ated by water meter­ing. This approach would do noth­ing to change our water usage patterns.)

The fun­da­men­tal draw­back of all of these options is pretty clear: water meter­ing both as a source of rev­enue and an impe­tus towards water con­ser­va­tion will be sig­nif­i­cantly under­mined if it is not imple­mented quickly and uni­ver­sally. And many will be (rightly) unhappy with the inequal­i­ties of treat­ment any of these alter­na­tive options will gen­er­ate. At the same time, the EU/IMF deal requires that water meter­ing gen­er­ate a rev­enue stream by 2014. In this frame­work, it is not cer­tain what free domes­tic quota of water, if any, the gov­ern­ment will be able to afford.

In sum, on these issues, the posi­tion paper raises more ques­tions than it offers poten­tial solu­tions, sug­gest­ing that the con­sul­ta­tion process needs to part of a sub­stan­tial debate on these issues. In years to come, we might well come to regret deci­sions made on the basis of finan­cial prac­ti­cal­ity rather than good prac­tice, which attends to the needs of house­holds and the pres­sures upon them.

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GV Sanitiser Demo

The Green­Valet Bio Kleen Sani­tiser is antimi­cro­bial, antibac­te­r­ial and anti­fun­gal, and a pow­er­ful & green domes­tic clean­ing prod­uct. Yet it is also 100% non-toxic and comes HSE recommended.

It is effec­tive on a wide range of sur­faces and sim­ple to use: mist on, leave for 60 sec­onds, and wipe off with a microfi­bre cloth.

It is also very effec­tive on uphol­stery. The GV Bio Kleen Sani­tiser lifts dirt away from the upholstery’s fibres, so that it can be wiped away, again with a microfi­bre cloth. (With uphol­stery a lit­tle more wip­ing is needed to cap­ture the dirt.)

See our demo below. (Click­ing on any image starts a slide show.)

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GV DeGreaser Demo

The Green­Valet Bio Kleen Heavy Duty DeGreaser is a fast and effec­tive cleaner of even the most stub­born dirt and stains. Once diluted (it comes in a 10-to-1 con­cen­trate), just spray on to the sur­face to be cleaned, leave for 60 sec­onds (or longer for par­tic­u­larly grimy sur­faces), and then wipe off with a damp microfi­bre cloth. It is that easy.

To give you a sense of its power, see how the DeGreaser tack­les the top sur­face of a much abused tumble-dryer, which is stained with dirt, deter­gents, and clothes fibres, all com­pounded and bound together with deep-fat fryer oil.

Amaz­ingly, this 100% non-toxic nanotechnology-based DeGreaser lifts the dirt away from the sur­face, so it can be wiped away. With par­tic­u­larly thick, dif­fi­cult dirt, some resid­ual grease may some­times remain. Repeat­ing the process a sec­ond time for such dif­fi­cult areas will remove any remain­ing dirt.

Try it for yourself.

(Click­ing on any image will start a slideshow. Note: there is one small area where the lam­i­nate sur­face has been dam­aged, and not even the GV Bio Kleen DeGreaser can repair that!)

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Threat of Further Water Contamination

Ear­lier posts con­sid­ered the most recent EPA report on water qual­ity in Ire­land and the impli­ca­tions of the EU’s soon to be imple­mented 2000 Water Frame­work Direc­tive.

For a fur­ther per­spec­tive, check out Frank McDonald’s Irish Times arti­cle (Mon­day, 7 Novem­ber 2011), enti­tled “Fur­ther Water Con­t­a­m­i­na­tion Inevitable if Strict Pol­icy Not Adopted to Pro­tect Resources”.

McDon­ald high­lights the threat posed to water sup­plies by the Celtic Tiger sprawl, and specif­i­cally the uneven stan­dards of sew­er­age sys­tems and schemes installed in developments.

He also states that Ire­land faces a threat of ongo­ing, daily EU fines, if it fails to meet the stan­dards set out in the EU Water Frame­work Direc­tive, 2000.

 

Posted in In the News, Water - Today's Challenges and Opportunities | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment
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Irish Times “Down the Drain” Series

This week­end saw the first of a series of arti­cles on the Irish water sup­ply and the chal­lenges fac­ing it, in the Irish Times, called: Down the Drain: What’s going wrong with Ireland’s water supply?

Water: The 21st Century IssueInclud­ing an inter­view with Envi­ron­ment min­is­ter, Phil Hogan, it high­lights sev­eral key issues going forward:

  • a water author­ity to be set up
  • house­hold water meter­ing pro­gramme begin­ning 2014
  • per­haps first 40–60 litres per day free
  • house­hold water charges of up to €400 per annum (based on UK charges)
  • 40% of all water pro­duced is lost to leaks, etc.
  • €600m per year needed to meet EU Water Frame­work Direc­tive, even before tack­ling issues of leaks
  • water will remain a pub­lic util­ity but will require pri­vate investment
  • min­is­ter sees focus on water con­ser­va­tion as water the most urgent infrastructure/resource issue fac­ing Ire­land and globe
  • by 2050, many nations will not have suf­fi­cient water sup­ply to sup­port industry
  • indus­try will migrate to coun­tries which can offer ade­quate water sup­ply — an eco­nomic chal­lenge and oppor­tu­nity for Ireland
  • arti­cle dis­cusses con­tro­ver­sial plan to pump water from Shan­non to sup­ply Dublin region

Read more: Down the Drain: What’s going wrong with Ireland’s water supply?

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