WaterSense
Tampa Water Department has been a WaterSense partner since 2007.
| WaterSense is a partnership program sponsored by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency. Its mission is to protect the future of
our nation's water supply by promoting and enhancing the market for
water-efficient products and services. Saving water is easy—many
products are already available for use, and it doesn't require changing
the way most of us live or do business. By choosing products labeled
through the WaterSense program, you know you'll be saving water for
future generations. |
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The Benefits of Water Efficiency
Save Water, Save Money
The average household spends as much as $500 per year on its water and sewer
bill. By making just a few simple changes to use water more efficiently, you
could save about $170 per year. If all U.S. households installed water-efficient
appliances, the country would save more than 3 trillion gallons of water and
more than $18 billion dollars per year! Also, when we use water more
efficiently, we reduce the need for costly water supply infrastructure
investments and new wastewater treatment facilities.
Save Water, Save Energy
It takes a considerable amount of energy to deliver and treat the water you use
everyday. American public water supply and treatment facilities consume about 56
billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) per year—enough electricity to power more than 5
million homes for an entire year. For example, letting your faucet run for five
minutes uses about as much energy as letting a 60-watt light bulb run for 14
hours.
By reducing household water use you can not only help reduce the energy required
to supply and treat public water supplies but also can help address climate
change. In fact:
If one out of every 100 American homes retrofitted with water-efficient
fixtures, we could save about 100 million kWh of electricity per year—avoiding
80,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions. That is equivalent to removing nearly
15,000 automobiles from the road for one year!
If 1 percent of American homes replaced an older toilet with a high-efficiency
toilet (HET), the country would save more than 38 million kWh of
electricity—enough to supply more than 43,000 households electricity for one
month.
Water Efficiency, Human Health, and the Environment
Depleting reservoirs and groundwater aquifers can put water supplies, human
health, and the environment at serious risk. Lower water levels can lead to
higher concentrations of natural contaminants, such as radon and arsenic, or
human pollutants, such as agricultural and chemical wastes. Using water more
efficiently helps maintain supplies at safe levels, protecting human health and
the environment.
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