Energy efficiency through water use efficiency in leisure centres
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
Standard Standard
2022. Paper presented at The 5th International Conference on Energy Production and Management, Tallinn, Estonia.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper › peer-review
HarvardHarvard
APA
CBE
MLA
VancouverVancouver
Author
RIS
TY - CONF
T1 - Energy efficiency through water use efficiency in leisure centres
AU - Bello-Dambatta, Aisha
AU - Williams, Prysor
PY - 2022/5
Y1 - 2022/5
N2 - Climate change poses significant challenges, and the global community is not on track to meet sustainable development goals or the Paris Agreement to mitigate climate change. The Covid-19 pandemic and necessary government measures to curb the spread of the virus has put climate action on hold and shut down economies. The need for improved ventilation as an important mitigating factor against the risk of Covid-19 transmission has additional implications for costs and emissions for businesses. Leisure centres, as large users of water and energy, account for significant emissions and operational costs. However, there is scope for very significant reductions in water and water-related energy demands and associated emissions and costs without impacting service quality and delivery. These reductions can be a promising response to the current challenges of climate change and post-Covid-19 economic recovery, particularly given current UK energy crises and inflation trends. We have been working with leisure centres to support them in improving energy efficiency through water use efficiency as part of the cross-border, interdisciplinary Interreg Dŵr Uisce research project on improving the energy performance and long-term sustainability of the water sectors in Ireland and Wales. In this paper, we discuss the potential of energy efficiency gains based on the framework on water management hierarchy which prioritises management actions in order of preference of implementation, where the next hierarchy should only be considered once all potential savings from the hierarchy above have been exhausted. We also discuss how these interventions are not one-size fits all – although leisure centres typically have the same water use types, they differ significantly in age, size, location, building types and materials, functionality, and efficiency; and why therefore, interventions must be considered on a site-specific and case-by-case basis.
AB - Climate change poses significant challenges, and the global community is not on track to meet sustainable development goals or the Paris Agreement to mitigate climate change. The Covid-19 pandemic and necessary government measures to curb the spread of the virus has put climate action on hold and shut down economies. The need for improved ventilation as an important mitigating factor against the risk of Covid-19 transmission has additional implications for costs and emissions for businesses. Leisure centres, as large users of water and energy, account for significant emissions and operational costs. However, there is scope for very significant reductions in water and water-related energy demands and associated emissions and costs without impacting service quality and delivery. These reductions can be a promising response to the current challenges of climate change and post-Covid-19 economic recovery, particularly given current UK energy crises and inflation trends. We have been working with leisure centres to support them in improving energy efficiency through water use efficiency as part of the cross-border, interdisciplinary Interreg Dŵr Uisce research project on improving the energy performance and long-term sustainability of the water sectors in Ireland and Wales. In this paper, we discuss the potential of energy efficiency gains based on the framework on water management hierarchy which prioritises management actions in order of preference of implementation, where the next hierarchy should only be considered once all potential savings from the hierarchy above have been exhausted. We also discuss how these interventions are not one-size fits all – although leisure centres typically have the same water use types, they differ significantly in age, size, location, building types and materials, functionality, and efficiency; and why therefore, interventions must be considered on a site-specific and case-by-case basis.
KW - climate action
KW - heat recovery
KW - sustainability
KW - water efficiency
KW - energy efficiency
M3 - Paper
T2 - The 5th International Conference on Energy Production and Management
Y2 - 23 May 2022 through 25 May 2022
ER -