Forecasting
Estimated Impact of COVID-19 Restrictions on California Water Consumption
Previous blogs and memos looked at the estimated impact of COVID-19 restrictions on the consumption of electricity. At a high level, it was found that the restrictions led to increased residential class power consumption and not completely offsetting decreased non-residential class power consumption. This outcome was not wholly unexpected since early in the battle against the spread of the COVID-19 virus most restrictions led to shuttering of businesses forcing most of the workforce to either work from home or go without work.
We recently performed some new analysis to determine if there was a similar impact on water consumption. In particular, the focus is on water consumption in California which is suffering through a severe drought. In response to the drought, California’s Governor Newsom issued an Executive Order in July 2022 calling on Californians to voluntarily reduce their water use by 15 percent compared to 2020 levels. The 15% target is estimated to reduce California’s urban (i.e., residential, commercial and industrial) water usage by about 277 billion gallons.
Read a new white paper that addresses the question: if COVID-19 restrictions led to a net increase in water consumption, then what would be the net impact of the voluntary restrictions? Does 15% return California urban water usage to more, about the same, or less than pre-pandemic levels?
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