Lean & Water Toolkit: Appendix A
Water Efficiency Resources and Technical Assistance Providers
This appendix focuses on resources that are directly applicable to manufacturing and industrial facilities; however, some resources and tools may have broader relevance and contain information that will be useful to commercial, institutional, and residential water users as well as industrial water users.
The following links exit the site
Water Efficiency and Conservation Resources
At the Crest of a Wave: A Proactive Approach to Corporate Water Strategy, Pacific Institute
Making the case that businesses and industrial facilities must prepare for water trends, this guide helps users to design and implement a two-stage water conservation strategy. Case studies and success stories include those from companies such as Unilever, Nestlé, Toyota, General Motors, Anheuser-Busch, GE, Proctor & Gamble, and more. The steps presented help corporations to create a comprehensive approach to managing water risks and opportunities.
This web-based tool and downloadable document provides step-by-step guidance and resources to help facilities conduct assessments of their water use and impacts on the water supply. Facilities can then use this information to develop water sustainability strategies, create action plans, and take actions to improve water resource management in their operations and community. The planner includes case examples of how GEMI member companies have engaged internal and external stakeholders and generated actions to improve water resource management and conservation. Modules include:
- Module 1: Facility Water Use and Impact Assessment Program
- Module 2: Water Management Risk Assessment Questionnaire
- Module 3: Case Examples and Links
The Alliance for Water Efficiency Resource Library webpages offer information on CII water use and efficiency opportunities, as well as links to the research and information about this end user category. In manufacturing, major uses and topics include cooling water, process water, steam generation and boilers, sanitation, irrigation, food services, and housekeeping. The resource briefly discusses the need for and value of water audits for facilities and applying the strategies of reduce, reuse, and recycle for facility water consumption.
Connecting the Drops Toward Creative Water Strategies: A Water Sustainability Tool™, GEMI
This tool presents the business case for water efficiency, and provides guidance and case studies on water assessment, opportunity identification, planning, and implementation. Five core analytic modules comprise a roadmap to help facilities identify specific steps that they can take to reduce their water use:
- Module 1: Water Use, Impact, and Source Assessment
- Module 2: Business Risk Assessment
- Module 3: Business Opportunity Assessment
- Module 4: Strategic Direction and Goal Setting
- Module 5: Strategy Development and Implementation
ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager, U.S. Department of Energy and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
This tool allows users to track and access information about their facility’s water consumption, in addition to data about energy consumption. Water and energy use and cost data can be managed across multiple facilities in a secure, online interface. The tool allows you to track multiple water meters for each facility, identify meters with customized names and key information, benchmark your facilities relative to past performance, monitor costs, and share data with others inside or outside of your organization. By tracking energy and water metrics across facilities, users can identify opportunities for efficiency improvements, and can receive EPA recognition for superior performance.
By spring 2012, GEMI plans to release a new tool, the GEMI Local Water Tool™, which will be an interactive, downloadable module that will help companies evaluate specific sites for water impacts and risks in order to devise site-specific sustainable water management strategies. This tool is designed to complement the Global Water Tool (described below), which can help a company identify and prioritize risks to its competitive position based on the link between its operations and the external water landscape. Companies can then employ the Local Water Tool to further evaluate the high water-risk locations and plan actions to manage those risks.
Waste Not, Want Not: The Potential for Urban Water Conservation in California, Pacific Institute
This report presents a comprehensive assessment of water use and conservation potential in the state of California, including industrial water use as well as commercial, institutional, and residential. It includes benchmarking data on water use for many industry sectors, a description of the methodology for estimating cost and water savings from water conservation strategies, and information on cost-effectiveness of various water conservation and efficiency improvements.
This guide presents the business case for water efficiency, offers programmatic steps, conservation strategies for indoor and outdoor use, and process-specific and mechanical systems, and illustrates potential opportunities with fifteen individual case studies.
This comprehensive manual provides sound principles of water conservation, strategies for conducting a successful water efficiency program, auditing tools, water management options, and examples for three industry-specific processes: textiles, food and beverage, and metal finishing. Practical tools in the guide include assessment checklists, step-by-step instructions for conducting a successful water efficiency program, and explanations of approaches such as water balancing. The manual details water management options for several common end uses, including:
- Sanitary and Domestic Uses
- Cooling and Heating
- Boilers
- Kitchen and Food Preparation
- Commercial Laundries
- Cleaning, Rinsing, and In-process Reuse
- Reuse and Reclamation
- Landscaping
Water Footprint Assessment Manual, Water Footprint Network
This guide provides a thorough description of the practice of water footprinting, including practical steps for estimating a water footprint and instructions for assessing the difference between a direct and indirect water footprint. This comprehensive guide to water footprinting instructs readers on estimating the footprint of a product as well as that of a business.
The WaterSense Best Management Practices, which EPA’s Office of Water developed in coordination with the Federal Energy Management Program, are a comprehensive set of recommendations and tips for how commercial and institutional facilities can improve their water efficiency. EPA’s Water- Sense Program helps water consumers identify best practices, resources, and tools to reduce their water use. Commercial and institutional water users can take advantage of lists of water-efficient products to install in their facilities, best management practices, and other ways to improve water efficiency.
WaterSmart Guidebook, East Bay Municipal Utility District, Oakland, California
This extensive guidebook provides information on water-saving technologies currently available to commercial, industrial, and institutional businesses, as well as specific water efficiency strategies and tips for different business types such as paper manufacturing and metal finishing. Many water-using technologies, such as process water, are explored to show the areas in which the most water is used and where it can be saved.
Technical Assistance Providers
Water Utility Incentive Programs
Many utilities and local governments offer incentive programs to water utility customers to encourage the efficiency of water use in the industrial, commercial, and institutional sectors. Common approaches include a combination of water audits and rebates to help facilities realize water savings. Check with your local utility to see what incentives may be available. Some notable programs include those sponsored by the following utilities and localities, all of which saw significant reductions of water use by facilities that they serve:
- City of Austin and Austin Water Utility
- Denver Water
- East Bay Municipal Utilities District
- Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
- City of Phoenix
- Santa Clara Valley Water District
- Saving Water Partnership Seattle
National Institute of Standards and Technology Manufacturing Extension Partnership
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) is a network of manufacturing assistance centers that provide Lean manufacturing training, Lean event facilitation, and other services to small-to-medium sized businesses to make them more competitive. Many MEP centers have experience providing integrated Lean and environmental services to businesses or have partnerships with environmental agencies to offer Lean and environment services.
Toolkit Navigation
- Contents & Acknowledgements
- Executive Summary
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Introduction
- Chapter 2: Water Use and Water Waste at Industrial Facilities
- Chapter 3: Finding Water Waste on the Factory Floor
- Chapter 4: Lean and Water Efficiency Improvement Strategies
- Chapter 5: Lean and Water Beyond the Factory Floor
- Chapter 6: Conclusion
- Appendix A: Water Efficiency Resources and Technical Assistance Providers
- Appendix B: Water Cost Calculator
- Appendix C: Water Unit Conversions and Calculations
- Appendix D: Water Efficiency Opportunity Checklist
- Appendix E: Glossary of Water Terms