Residential rainwater harvesting: Effects of incentive policies and water consumption over economic feasibility
2017
Dumit Gómez, Yapur | Teixeira, Luiza Girard
Rainwater harvesting is currently a recurring theme as part of the sustainable practices for urban constructions. The economic feasibility of implementing a system capable of capturing, treating and distributing rainwater for residential uses concerns the user who intends to benefit from such practice. To this end, twelve single-family houses of different construction standards were selected for this research in the city of Belém, Pará, Brazil. The design and budget for the installation of a rainwater harvesting system were prepared for each house. The hydrological performance and economic feasibility were evaluated under different consumption and economic policies scenarios using the rainwater harvesting simulation software. The main conclusion is that rainwater systems are more economically feasible in households with higher water demand, regardless of the size of the catchment area. The cost of implementing rainwater systems has little variation with the construction standard of the residence where it is installed. The tariff structure makes it economically unfeasible to harvest rainwater in any scenario for houses where water consumption is below the social tariff or receives fixed price water bill. A combination of rising water prices to the same level of water production costs and reduced implementation costs improves the economic feasibility of rainwater harvesting.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by National Agricultural Library