jc200807h003 nrw master plan v1 0
Transcription
jc200807h003 nrw master plan v1 0
Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY NON-REVENUE WATER SECTION 5-YEAR STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE REDUCTION OF NON-REVENUE WATER IN THE AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY Table of Contents Executive Summary 1. Background 2. Objectives of Non-Revenue Water Reduction Strategy 3. Legislative Framework 3.1 3.2 Legal Framework Policy Framework 4. Limitations of Strategic Plan 5. Research Framework 5.1 5.2 6. Non-Revenue Water Within Amajuba District Municipality 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 7. International Best Practice National Best Practice Definition and extent of Area of Operation Relationships with Other Departments Non-Revenue Water Areas of Influence Profile of Non-Revenue Water Section Review of Non-Revenue Water Activities to Date 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 JC200807H003 v1.0 Non-Revenue Water Reduction Activities Quantification of Costs Estimation of Benefits Water Balances per Financial Year Key Performance Indicators per Financial Year Selected Trends and Trend Analysis Page 1 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 8. Current Situation 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Water Balance Key Performance Indicators Demand Projections Budget Availability Non-Revenue Water Activities 9. Key Challenges Identified in Implementing Non-Revenue Water Activities 10. Strategic Plan Approach and Methodology 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 11. Non-Revenue Water Reduction Philosophy 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 12. Asset Management Philosophy Asset Management System Operations and Maintenance Funding Strategy 14.1 14.2 14.3 15. Option 1 – Current Funding Limitations Option 2 – Additional Funding Availability Financial Year Work Packages Procurement Packages Asset Management 13.1 13.2 13.3 14. Water Balance Components Description Interventions per Water Balance Components Benefits of Non-Revenue Water Reduction Non-Revenue Water Reduction Prioritisation Budget Focus Areas Non-Revenue Water Reduction Programme 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 13. Overall Target for Non-Revenue Water Reduction Supply System Description and Operation Identification of Supply Areas Supply Area Characteristics Non-Revenue Reduction Model Option 1 – Current Funding Limitations Option 2 – Additional Funding Availability In-House Resource Development Resource Management Strategy JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 2 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 15.1 15.2 15.3 Option 1 – Current Funding Limitations Option 2 – Additional Funding Availability In-House Resource Development 16. Quality Assurance 17. Monitoring and Evaluation 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 18. Monthly Reporting Requirements Annual Reporting Requirements Programme Review Water Auditor Performance Management 18.1 18.2 Internal External Service Providers 19. Risk Management 20. Communication Management 21. Conclusions and Recommendations Annexures A B C D E F G H Current Water Balances Projected Water Balances – Without Intervention Projected Water Balances – With Intervention Interactive NRW Reduction Model NRW Reduction Intervention Work Plan Template NRW Monthly Reporting Template NRW Risk Management Schedule NRW Communication Plan JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 3 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY NON-REVENUE WATER SECTION 5-YEAR STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE REDUCTION OF NON-REVENUE WATER IN THE AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY Executive Summary Introduction and Background The Amajuba District Municipality (ADM) recognised the need to focus on the reduction of Non-Revenue Water (NRW) as part of its overall Water Conservation/Water Demand Management strategy as well as its contribution towards the objectives of the National Water Conservation/Water Demand Management (WC/WDM) initiatives currently underway throughout the country in support of the protection of a scarce water supply resource. Non-Revenue Water, for the purposes of this Master Plan, is defined as the difference between System Input Volume (SIV) - determined as the volume of water produced/bought for supply to a distribution system - and the total Billed Authorised Consumption (BAC). This Master Plan is concerned with volumes only – revenue collection and debt analysis did not form part of the scope of this appointment. It was therefore decided to prepare a strategic Non-Revenue Water Reduction Master Plan that covered a 5-year outlook in terms of minimising losses through the ADM area of supply on behalf of the Water Services Provider (WSP). The objectives of this Master Plan were s follows: • • • • • Determine the baseline situation in terms of water balances for each supply system in accordance with international and national best practice; Identify areas of possible NRW reduction, by water balance component and per supply system, prioritise these in order of impact and prepare a consolidated NRW Reduction Intervention programme; Establish targets in terms of NRW by volume, supported by Key Performance Indicators and budget/funding requirements; Address the internal requirements necessary for the successful implementation of a NRW reduction programme in terms of resources, systems and critical success factors; and Develop a software model that allowed ADM the flexibility to determine intervention impact, targets and budget requirements to suit changing needs and focus areas. The responses to these objectives have been included in this Master Plan. Summarised Non-Revenue Water Reduction Framework This Master Plan is strategic in nature and therefore by definition cannot be used as an operational document. It provides a framework within which implementation can take place and advocates an intervention strategy, achievable targets and budget requirements. It is based on a desktop study without the valuable input provided by detailed field measurements. Although every effort has been made in terms of validating the accuracy of the information used in the preparation of the Master Plan, much of this information has been gained from multiple sources and has had to be trusted without JC200807H003 v1.0 Page iv Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water independent verification. This aside, there is a high level of confidence in both the figures used and the recommendations made. Any NRW reduction strategy and implementation programme must take cognisance of both local and national imperatives, regulations and guidelines. In this regard, a holistic approach to the reduction of NRW from a strategic (5-year) to detailed operational (1-year) focus has been proposed, summarised in Figure 1. This constitutes the overall framework within which the NRW reduction programme should take place. It must also be noted that this Master Plan has been of singular focus in terms of reducing NRW – it has not addressed the larger issues affecting water conservation, which must be borne in mind when interpreting the contents of the Master Plan. Figure 1: Amajuba District Municipality Non-Revenue Water Reduction Programme Implementation System Characteristics The Master Plan identified a total of 4 individual systems across the entire ADM that were adopted as the basis for all calculations, analysis and recommendations. These systems were: • • Utrecht Dannhauser JC200807H003 v1.0 Page v Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • Durnacol Hattingspruit Newcastle Local Municipality, although it falls with the ADM area of jurisdiction, is a Water Services Authority in its own right and therefore has been excluded from this Master Plan. Figures, analyses, targets and KPI’s were developed for each individual supply system, but the summarised figures only have been included in the Executive Summary. Key ADM characteristics are as follows (based on July 2009 data): Total estimated length of mains Total number of formal connections Total number of standpipes (estimated) Estimated population Average supply pressure Service connection density Average daily demand (kl/connection/day) Average Year-on-Year Growth in Demand : : : : : : : : 153km 3 128 1 527 126 000 60m 20 connections/km 0,46 1,4% (from 2002/03 to 2008/09) Current Situation In terms of the adopted international standard for the presentation of water volumes, the water balance for the entire ADM area of supply for the 2009/10 financial year (within the accepted unit of kl/year) has been included in Figure 2. The adopted Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) for the entire ADM area of supply, based on the figures used in the compilation of the 2009/10 financial year water balance are as follows: Inefficiency of Use of Water Resources Total Water Losses Current Annual Real Losses Apparent Losses Non-Revenue Water by Volume 38,1% 189,9 m3/service connection/year or 520,2 litres/service connection/day 161,4 m3/service connection/year or 442,2 litres/service connection/day 28,5 m3/service connection/year or 78,0 litres/service connection/day 60,4% Comparing these figures to the international data set, the KPI’s for ADM are below average. In terms of financial indicators, and based on the combined individual unit cost of water per system, the annual costs of the water balance components for the 2009/10 financial year were as follows: Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Non-Revenue Water JC200807H003 v1.0 R 919 000 R 398 000 R2 255 000 R3 570 000 Page vi Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Billed Authorised Consumption 779 952 kl/year ±10,0% Authorised Consumption 1 088 302 kl/year ±9,8% Unbilled Authorised Consumption 360 350 kl/year ±23,4% System Input Volume 1 970 123 kl/year ±10,0% Apparent Losses 132 573 kl/year ±118,2% Water Losses 883 821 kl/year ±18,8% Real Losses 751 248 kl/year ±7,3% Billed Metered Consumption 779 952 kl/year ±10,0% Billed Unmetered Consumption - kl/year ±0,0% Unmetered Municipal Consumption 19 701 kl/year ±20,0% Unbilled Unmetered Consumption 286 649 kl/year ±25,0% Illegal Connections 116 974 kl/year Metering Inaccuracies 15 599 kl/year Mains Leaks 539 863 kl/year Reservoir Overflows 7 512 kl/year Service Connection Leaks 203 873 kl/year Revenue Water 779 952 kl/year ±10,0% Non-Revenue Water 1 190 171 kl/year ±15,2% Figure 2: Amajuba District Municipality – Consolidated Water Balance for 2009/10 Financial Year Future Projections In terms of projecting 5 years forward in terms of water balances, the following two water balances were prepared: • • Scenario 1: Situation in Year+5 without any NRW reduction intervention taking place, but taking into account normal system growth (directly due to demand) and system attrition (deterioration of infrastructure condition) Scenario 2: Situation in Year+5 with NRW reduction intervention carried out per water balance component, aimed at either reducing real or apparent losses, and simultaneously improving all billed volumes. This was determined using empirically-based volume recovery factors and/or unit consumption factors and would determine the maximum practically achievable NRW volumes. Scenario 1 (no intervention) determined that System Input Volume across the entire ADM area of supply would increase approximately 43% to 2 827 Ml/year and NRW by volume would increase approximately 56% to 1 865 Ml/year within the 5-year Master Plan period. The Inefficiency of Use of Water Resources would increase to 46% and NRW by Volume increase to 66%. A detailed NRW reduction intervention programme was determined and the maximum practical reduction of NRW by volume across each of the 16 supply systems calculated. This was based on known, achievable factors bearing in mind the 80:20 rule on obtaining maximum impact with the optimal JC200807H003 v1.0 Page vii Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water amount of effort. The projected water balance based on these intervention factors for the end of the 5year Master plan period has been included in Figure 3 (these figures exclude any savings that could be obtained from mains replacement): Billed Authorised Consumption 1 256 345 kl/year ±10,0% Authorised Consumption 1 374 326 kl/year ±9,3% Unbilled Authorised Consumption 117 981 kl/year ±22,4% System Input Volume 1 594 824 kl/year ±8,1% Apparent Losses 49 434 kl/year ±10,0% Water Losses 220 498 kl/year ±6,4% Real Losses 171 064 kl/year ±7,7% Billed Metered Consumption 1 256 345 kl/year ±10,0% Billed Unmetered Consumption - kl/year ±0,0% Unmetered Municipal Consumption 12 694 kl/year ±20,0% Unbilled Unmetered Consumption 105 287 kl/year ±25,0% Illegal Connections 24 307 kl/year Metering Inaccuracies 25 127 kl/year Mains Leaks 122 557 kl/year Reservoir Overflows 1 711 kl/year Service Connection Leaks 46 796 kl/year Revenue Water 1 256 345 kl/year ±10,0% Non-Revenue Water 338 479 kl/year ±8,8% Figure 3: Amajuba District Municipality – Projected Water Balance for Entire Area of Supply Based on Roll-out of NRW Reduction Intervention Recommendations The adopted Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s) for the entire ADM area of supply, based on the figures used in the projected water balance are as follows: Inefficiency of Use of Water Resources Non-Revenue Water by Volume 11% 21% Comparing these figures to the international data set, the projected KPI’s for ADM are good/fair. Should the recommendations of the NRW reduction interventions be accepted, the following benefits would be realised: • • • • Reduction of System Input Volume by 23,5% Reduction of Non-Revenue Water by Volume by 351% Reduction in Unbilled Authorised Consumption by 305% Increase in Billed Authorised Consumption by 161%. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page viii Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water For comparison purposes, the relevant KPI’s from each of scenarios compared to the baseline have been included in Table 1: Key Performance Indicator NRW by Volume % Inefficiency of Use % Current (2009/10) 60,4 38,1 Without Intervention (+5 years) 66,0 46,2 With Intervention (+5 years) 10,7 21,2 Table 1: Amajuba District Municipality – Comparison of Projections With and Without Non-Revenue Water Reduction Interventions Non-Revenue Water Reduction Targets The maximum practical achievable NRW by Volume for the entire ADM area of supply has been established as 21% - it will become prohibitively expensive and require a disproportionate amount of time, resources and budget to achieve any better target than this. Based on the predictive model that was prepared as part of this investigation, the cost of all interventions required to realise this target has been determined as approximately R27,6 million when discounted back to NPV. A cost:benefit curve, based on the predictive model, has been included in both the Master Plan and spreadsheet model to assist with the determination of the benefit of any NRW reduction programme based on budget/funding constraints. Key Challenges A number of key challenges were identified both during the preparation of the Master Plan as well as for the roll-out of the proposed NRW reduction interventions. These are summarised as follows: • • • • • • • • • Inadequate background data on individual supply schemes/systems (in some instances even simple system characteristics were difficult to obtain) Lack of reliable baseline field measurements such as flow (System Input Volume and Minimum Night Flows) and pressure Lack of understanding of current best practice, definitions, theory and application of theory Certain confusion around the extent, constitution and reliability of Billed Authorised Consumption volumes Lack of management (and number) of external professional service providers, who ostensibly operate in isolation Lack of understanding and implementation of appropriate design standards that could minimise NRW volumes even at design stage Dedicated Client capacity constraints and reliance on external Consultants Lack of clarity on available MTEF budgets for NRW reduction activities Market-related constraints for specialist service providers (such as leak detection contractors) due to current industry boom. A standard risk assessment and mitigation schedule has been prepared in response to these challenges and included in the Master Plan. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page ix Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Critical Success Factors In order to ensure the success of this NRW reduction programme and to meet the proposed targets contained in this Master Plan, there are a number of critical success factors. These were identified as being: • • • • • • • Recognition of NRW reduction as a major focus area of the Water Service Provider and Water Service Authority by all Client Departments, including and especially Operations Recognition of the need to have sufficient dedicated internal resources available to be focused on ensuring the implementation, sustaining, monitoring and evaluation of NRW reduction intervention Embracing the principles and objectives as Water Conservation/Water Demand Management Securing the requested funding of approximately R28 million over the next five financial years Implementing accepted best practice in all aspects of NRW reduction, including data/information management Not falling into the trap of treating the NRW reduction interventions proposed in this Master plan as a once-off capital investment – any intervention has to be sustained and the ongoing operations and maintenance must be budgeted for and carried out Focus must be on high impact interventions irrespective of any external (political) influence that could be brought to bear on the proposed roll-out strategy. Resource Management An analysis was carried out on the current structure and resource allocation in the Client organisation in terms of managing NRW reduction intervention programmes. Currently, the management of any NRW activity is undertaken by one resource. It was deemed imperative that the profile of NRW be elevated to as senior a level as possible within the Client organisation and that, if possible, dedicated focus on NRW activities be allowed from this Directorate without distraction from other initiatives. In terms of the actual resources to be used, it is proposed that a training and mentorship programme be adopted and implemented through the programme management phase of the roll-out of the NRW reduction interventions. With due recognition of the constraints faced by the public sector in attracting and retaining skilled resources, it was proposed that a form of “public private partnership” be adopted to ensure the success of the proposed NRW reduction strategy. Interactive Software Model In accordance with the overall brief, an interactive predictive model was developed in Microsoft Excel that allows flexibility to the Client in determining the output from any number of scenarios on a per system and overall ADM perspective. This has been appended electronically to the Master Plan and allows for the following to be modelled: • • • • • System Input Reduction modelling (budget-dependent) Billing Improvement modelling (budget-dependent) NRW Target establishment, determining target NRW % by volume and budget requirements Maximum achievable NRW % by volume NRW target establishment by cost:benefit ratios JC200807H003 v1.0 Page x Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Conclusions and Recommendations The key conclusions and recommendations contained in this Master Plan are summarised as follows: • • • • • • • • It is unrealistic for ADM to set a medium-term target of less than 21% by volume An economically optimal target is 21% NRW by volume within a budget of approximately R28 million (including any mains replacement) An annual operations budget of at least R500 000 per annum be set aside to ensure the sustainability of all pressure management intervention as well as targeted leak detection and repair activities The largest impact on NRW volumes is pressure management in Utecht. Any available budget up to R1 million should be used for this purpose New design standards must be formalised and implemented (new pressure regimes, pipe material, etc) All unmetered connections, including all currently unmetered standpipes, must be metered and registered as connections as a matter of urgency The internal profile of Non-Revenue Water reduction and the Directorate: Engineering Services must be raised to such a level as to demonstrate corporate and operational support and buy-in. Without this, the success and impact of the entire programme may be compromised The recommendations as contained in this Master Plan for the roll-out of the NRW reduction interventions be approved for implementation JC200807H003 v1.0 Page xi Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY NON-REVENUE WATER SECTION 5-YEAR STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PLAN FOR THE REDUCTION OF NON-REVENUE WATER IN THE AMAJUBA DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY 1. Background The Amajuba District Municipality (ADM) recognised the need to focus on the reduction of NonRevenue Water (NRW) as part of its overall Water Conservation/Water Demand Management strategy as well as its contribution towards the objectives of the National Water Conservation/Water Demand Management (WC/WDM) initiatives currently underway throughout the country in support of the protection of a scarce water supply resource. Non-Revenue Water, for the purposes of this Master Plan, is defined as the difference between System Input Volume (SIV) - determined as the volume of water produced/bought for supply to a distribution system - and the total Billed Authorised Consumption (BAC). This Master Plan is concerned with volumes only – revenue collection and debt analysis did not form part of the scope of this appointment. It was therefore decided to prepare a strategic Non-Revenue Water Reduction Master Plan that covered a 5-year outlook in terms of minimising losses through the ADM area of supply on behalf of the Water Services Provider (WSP). The objectives of this Master Plan were s follows: • • • • • Determine the baseline situation in terms of water balances for each supply system in accordance with international and national best practice; Identify areas of possible NRW reduction, by water balance component and per supply system, prioritise these in order of impact and prepare a consolidated NRW Reduction Intervention programme; Establish targets in terms of NRW by volume, supported by Key Performance Indicators and budget/funding requirements; Address the internal requirements necessary for the successful implementation of a NRW reduction programme in terms of resources, systems and critical success factors; and Develop a software model that allowed ADM the flexibility to determine intervention impact, targets and budget requirements to suit changing needs and focus areas. The responses to these objectives have been included in this Master Plan. 2. Objectives of Non-Revenue Water Reduction Strategy The objective of the preparation of the Non-Revenue Water (NRW) Master Plan is to provide both strategic and operational framework to the Water Services Department to implement its NRW reduction interventions over a five year period. The framework for the preparation and implementation of a NRW master plan for the Amajuba District Municipality will include the following: JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 1 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water a) Desktop assessment of existing areas of supply from bulk conveyance per supply system; Review and documentation of previous NRW reduction activities, since 2004, which will include; • Review of activities carried out to date (nature, cost and benefits) • Preparation of past and current (annual) water balances in IWA format with 95% confidence levels • Determination of annual costs incurred to date through NRW reduction interventions • Estimation/determination of annual savings achieved to date through NRW reduction activities Recommendations for system infrastructure improvements to be carried out on a system supply level; Recommendations for the preparation of an IWA benchmark water balance to be carried out per supply system/area Preparation of a 5-year NRW implementation programme/roll-out plan for intervention, on an annual basis; Identification of highest impact NRW reduction intervention per supply system Development of Key Performance Indicators and Measurement Baselines to measure improvements in the reduction of network losses over the next 5 years Identification/differentiation between pilot interventions and full scale roll-out interventions Corresponding development of procurement guidelines Assessment of the current in-house capacity of the Water Services Department and subsequent preparation of a 6-monthly job description/work functions / work plans for each current resource Review and assessment of funding strategies b) c) d) e) f) g) h) i) j) k) It must be noted that the intention of this report is not to go into extreme detail regarding supply problems, operational problems and infrastructure shortcomings in each of the supply areas. Rather, the intention is to offer direction for the global implementation of a water loss management programme. 3. Legislative Framework 3.1 Legal Framework Although not a legislative requirement at this stage, this strategic management plan has been prepared within a prevailing legislative framework which addresses the provision of water services as well as accountability in terms of managing water resources. The legal documents referenced or used in the compilation of this Master Plan are as follows: • • • • National Water Act – 1998 (№ 36 of 1998) National Water Amendment Act – 1999 (№ 45 of 1999) Water Services Act (№ 108 of 1997) Water Services Amendment Act – 2004 (№ 30 of 2004) JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 2 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • • 3.2 Norms and Standards in Respect of Tariffs for Water Services in terms of Section 10(1) of the Water Services Act (№ 108 of 1997) Regulations relating to Compulsory National Standards and Measures to Conserve Water Water Services By-Laws of the AMAJUBA District Council as Water Services Authority Policy Framework In support of the Legislative Framework, a number of policy documents have been referred to in the drafting of this Master Plan, both from a National and local perspective. These are: • • • • • 4. National Water Conservation and Water Demand Management Strategy, 2004 Water Conservation and Water Demand Management Strategy for the Water Services Sector, 2004 National Water Resource Strategy (NWRS), 1st Edition, September 2004 Guidelines for Water Supply Systems Operations and Management Plans during Normal and Drought Conditions (RSA c 000/00/2305), October 2006 Amajuba District Municipality Water Services Policy Limitations of Strategic Plan This Master Plan is strategic in nature and therefore by definition cannot be used as an operational document. It provides a framework within which implementation can take place and advocates an intervention strategy, achievable targets and budget requirements. It is based on a desktop study without the valuable input provided by detailed field measurements. Although every effort has been made in terms of validating the accuracy of the information used in the preparation of the Master Plan, much of this information has been gained from multiple sources and has had to be trusted without independent verification. This aside, there is a high level of confidence in both the figures used and the recommendations made. Any NRW reduction strategy and implementation programme must take cognisance of both local and national imperatives, regulations and guidelines. In this regard, a holistic approach to the reduction of NRW from a strategic (5-year) to detailed operational (1-year) focus has been proposed, summarised in Figure 1. This constitutes the overall framework within which the NRW reduction programme should take place. It must also be noted that this Master Plan has been of singular focus in terms of reducing NRW – it has not addressed the larger issues affecting water conservation, which must be borne in mind when interpreting the contents of the Master Plan. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 3 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 1: Amajuba District Municipality Non-Revenue Water Reduction Programme Implementation 5. Non-Water Revenue Reduction Framework 5.1 International Best Practice International Water Association – Losses from Water Supply Systems: Standard Terminology and Recommended Performance Measures 5.1.1 Background With the increasing international trend towards sustainability, economic efficiency and protection of the environment, the problem of losses from water supply systems is of major interest worldwide. Both the technical and financial aspects are receiving increasing attention, especially during water shortages or periods of rapid development. However, particular problems and unnecessary misunderstandings arise because of differences in the definitions used by individual countries for describing and calculating losses. Also, traditional performance indicators also give conflicting impressions of true performance in controlling water losses (for example, the use of percentages). In 1996, the Operations and Maintenance Committee of the IWA’s Distribution Division set up a Task Force to review existing methodologies for international comparisons of water losses from water supply systems. The main objectives were: JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 4 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water To prepare a recommended basic standard terminology for calculation of real and apparent losses; To recommend how the annual volume of real and apparent losses should be calculated from a water balance; and To review and recommend preferred performance indicators for international comparisons of losses. • • • The resulting publication (Losses from Water Supply Systems: Standard Terminology and Recommended Performance Measures)1 summarises the conclusions of the Water Losses Task Force, with particular reference to the preferred Performance Indicators for assessing operational performance in control of real losses in supply systems. The Water Losses Task Force publication formed an integral part of a more comprehensive IWA publication: Manual of Best Practice “Performance Indicators for Water Supply Services”2. It is these two publications that form the International Standard used on this project. 5.1.2 Basic Terminology Some of the standard definitions for international use used in this report have been included below for ease of reference and understanding: • System Input Volume is the volume of water input to a distribution system. • Authorised Consumption is the volume of metered and/or unmetered water taken by registered consumers, the water supplier or others who are authorised to do so, for domestic, commercial and industrial purposes (authorised consumption includes items such as fire fighting and training, flushing of mains and sewers, street cleaning, watering of municipal gardens, public fountains and building water. These may be billed or unbilled, metered or unmetered according to local practice). • Water Losses of a system are calculated as: Water Losses = System Input Volume – Authorised Consumption Water losses can be considered as a total volume for the whole system, or for partial systems such as bulk or reticulation. In each case the components of the calculation would be adjusted accordingly. Water Losses consist of Real and Apparent losses, and are effectively identical to Unaccounted-for Water. • Real Losses are physical water losses from the distribution system, up to the point of consumer metering. The volume lost through all types of leaks, bursts and overflow depends on frequencies, flow rates and average durations of individual leaks. • Apparent Losses consist of unauthorised consumption (theft or illegal use) and all types of inaccuracies associated with bulk and consumer metering. For example, under- JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 5 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water registration of bulk meters and over-registration of consumer meters leads to underestimation of losses. Conversely, over-registration of bulk meters and under-registration of consumer meters leads to over-estimation of real losses. • Unauthorised Consumption is generally associated with the misuse of fire hydrants and fire service connections, and illegal connections. • Non-Revenue Water (NRW) is the difference between the System Input Volume and Billed Authorised Consumption. 5.1.3 Basic Approach The best practice in management of water losses consists of a combination of continuous water balance calculations together with night flow measurements on a continuous or “as required” basis. The water balance, usually taken over a 12-month period, should include: • • • A thorough accounting of all water into and out of a distribution system, including inspection of system records; An ongoing meter testing and calibration programme; and Due allowance to time lags between bulk meter readings and consumer meter readings. The water balance calculation quantifies volumes of total water into the supply system, authorised consumption (billed and unbilled, metered and unmetered) and water losses (apparent and real) as shown in Figure 2. Where continuous leak detection is not being practised, the process may also include a cost to benefit analysis for recovering excess leakage, leading to a leak detection programme. Authorised consumption m3/year System input volume m3/year (±x%) Billed authorised consumption m3/year (±x%) Unbilled authorised consumption m3/year (±x%) Apparent losses m3/year (±x%) Water losses m3/year (±x%) (±x%) Real losses m3/year (±x%) Billed metered consumption Billed unmetered consumption Unbilled, metered consumption Unbilled unmetered consumption Illegal connections Metering inaccuracies Revenue water m3/year (±x%) Non-revenue water m3/year (±x%) Mains leaks Reservoir overflows Service connection leaks Figure 2: Components of an IWA Water Balance All water balance calculations are approximate to some degree because of the difficulty of assessing all the components with complete accuracy. The reliability is likely to be greatest when JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 6 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water input volumes are purchased (with duplicate metering), and all water is measured through regularly maintained accurate customer meters supplying properties that do not have storage tanks. Storage tanks can result in low flow rates through service connections, and these low flows may not register accurately on the customer meter. Best practice, as recommended by the IWA Performance Indicators Group is to assign confidence grades to each component of the water balance, incorporating both reliability and accuracy grades. In some countries these grades are checked independently as part of the process. Some discussion around the use of the confidence grading system has been included later in the report. Each component of the annual water balance (Figure 1) should always be initially presented in terms of volume per year. An improved understanding of Real Losses can be obtained by classifying components as follows: • • • • Background losses from very small undetectable leaks – typically low flow rates, long duration, large volumes; Losses from leaks and bursts reported to the water supplier – typically high flow rates, short duration, moderate volumes; Losses from unreported bursts, found by active leakage control (ALC) – medium flow rates, but duration and volume depends on ALC policy; and Overflows at, and leakage from, service reservoirs. Methods of assessing Real Losses, other than from Water Balances, include: • • • Analysing night flows based on district meter data Recording numbers and types of leaks and bursts and their average flow rates and durations Modelling calculations that allow for background leakage and pressure. Although physical losses after the point of customer metering are excluded from assessment of Real Losses under this definition, they can sometimes be highly significant and worthy of attention for demand management purposes. 5.1.4 Results Presentation The Water Losses Task Force had, as part of their brief, to determine suitable, internationally applicable key performance indicators that could be used to table (essentially a-dimensional) results. The key indicators were to address both technical and financial performance. It was the findings of the Task Force that the choice for a basic operational performance indicator lay between length of mains or per connection. International experience has shown that the greatest proportion of losses occurs on service connections rather than mains, except at low density of connections. The Task Force’s rationale was therefore to use a “per service connection” indicator which is more likely to be suitable for the widest range of situations. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 7 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water The performance indicators developed by the Water Losses Task Force were included in the IWA’s Manual of Best Practice “Performance Indicators for Water Supply Services”2. In this publication, three levels of performance indicators were recommended for use by water utilities, namely: • • • Level 1 (L1): a first layer of indicators that provide a general management overview of the efficiency and effectiveness of the water undertaking; Level 2 (L2): additional indicators which provide a better insight than the Level 1 indicators for users who need to go further in depth; and Level 3 (L3): indicators that provide the greatest amount of specific detail, but are still relevant at the top management level. Each of these levels apply to performance indicators in the following fields: water resources, personnel, physical, operational, quality of service and financial. Not all these performance indicators are applicable to water loss management; therefore only those applicable to water loss management have been included. The recommended water loss management performance indicators, including their relevant importance in terms of level, have been presented in Figure 3. A more detailed discussion on the operational performance measures has been included after Figure 3. Figure 3: Relative Importance of Recommended Water Losses and Non-Revenue Water Indicators Technical Indicator for Real Losses: The Water Losses Task Force recommended that the basic Technical Indicator for Real Losses should be the annual volume of Real Losses divided by the JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 8 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water number of service connections (Nc), allowing for the percentage of the year for which the system is pressurized, ie. CARL = Current Annual Volume of Real Losses/Nc (litres/service connection/day when the system is pressurised) A more detailed interpretation of CARL values can then be obtained by comparing the CARL value with a ‘best estimate’ of Unavoidable Average Real Losses (UARL) that allows for local conditions of connection density, location of customer meters and average operating pressure, if all aspects of leakage control were being managed to the highest technical standards. Unavoidable Average Real Losses (UARL): It was recommended that the calculation of the UARL in litres/service connection/day be based on the following form of equation. This recognized separate influences of Real Losses from length of mains (Lm in km), number of service connections from the edge of the street to customer meters (Lp in km), and average pressure (P in metres) when the system is pressurized. UARL = (A x Lm/Nc + B + C x Lp/Nc) x P (litres/service connection/day when the system is pressurised) The equation and its parameters A, B and C are based on statistical analysis of international data, including 27 different water supply systems in 20 countries. Comparisons of CARL and UARL : The difference between the CARL and the UARL represents the maximum potential for further savings in Real Losses, when the system is pressurized. Also, the ratio of CARL to UARL is a useful non-dimensional index of the overall condition and management of infrastructure, under the current operating regime of average pressure and continuity of supply, and is recommended as an additional step in interpreting the calculated value of the CARL for a wide range of international situations. The question as to whether the current pressure regime is unnecessarily high, or too low, should of course also be evaluated on a regular basis. Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) = CARL/UARL For example, if the CARL is 107 litres/connection/day, and the UARL is 53.6 litres/connection/day, the Infrastructure Leakage Index is 107/53.6 = 2.0. Values of ILI calculated for 27 actual situations in 20 countries, which were used to test the validity of the methodology, ranged from close to 1.0, up to just above 10.0. Well-managed systems in very good condition would be expected to have ILI values close to 1.0, with higher values for older systems with infrastructure deficiencies. Figure 4 is the graphical representation of he ILI values from the 20 countries. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 9 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 4: Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) Values from 27 Water Supply Systems in 20 Countries (as compiled by IWA Water Losses Task Force) 5.2 Performance Indicators for Water Supply Services – Data Confidence Grading 5.2.1 General The results and analysis of the approaches tabled in the previous sections will always be dependent on the quality of information and data used. In this regard a Confidence Grading Scheme has been used to assess the adequacy, reliability and accuracy of the existing data in determining the relevant performance indicators. The system used for this purpose was the recommended standard contained in the International Water Association’s Manual of Best Practice: Performance Indicators for Water Supply Services. The confidence grades are intended to provide a rational basis for undertakings to qualify information provided for, in this case, analytical purposes, as regards to reliability and accuracy. In accordance with international Best Practice, a quality assurance approach has been employed in the methodology used to assign confidence grades. The confidence grades reflect the current status of the data, not the future status that it may be intended to achieve. An alpha-numeric grading system has been utilized, comprising of the combination of two fields: reliability bands and accuracy bands. 5.2.2 Reliability Bands The following reliability bands for data were proposed: JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 10 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water A – Highly Reliable: data based on sound records, procedures, investigations or analyses that are properly documented and as such are recognized as the best available. B – Reliable: generally as in Band A, but with minor shortcomings – some of the documentation is missing, the assessment is old or some reliance on unconfirmed data or reports is made. C – Unreliable: data based on extrapolation from a limited sample for which band A or B is not available. D – Highly Unreliable: data based on unconfirmed verbal reports and/or cursory inspections or analysis. 5.2.3 Accuracy Bands Accuracy is defined as the approximation between the result of a given measurement and the (conventionally) correct value for the variable to be measured. Whenever the measurement accuracy cannot be assessed, it should be graded as greater than 100%. The accuracy bands utilized are: 1 2 3 4 5 6 X : : : : : : : better than or equal to ±1% not band 1, but better than or equal to ±5% not bands 1 or 2, but better than or equal to ±10% not bands 1, 2 or 3, but better than or equal to ±25% not bands 1, 2, 3 or 4 but better than or equal to ±50% not bands 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 but better than or equal to ±100% values which fall outside the valid range, such as >100%, or small numbers. 5.2.4 Overall Confidence Grades The confidence grades are represented as an alphanumeric code, which couples the reliability band and the accuracy band – for example: A2 - data based on sound records (highly reliable, Band A) which is estimated to be within ±5% (Accuracy Band 2) C4 - data based on extrapolation from a limited sample (unreliable, Band C) which is estimated to be within ±25% (Accuracy Band 4). The application of this data confidence grading has been included later in the report. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 11 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 5.3 National Best Practice: SABS 0306 – The Management of Potable Water in Distribution Systems 5.3.1 Background This standard was approved according to SABS procedures on 25 June 1999 and was publicly launched at the Afriwater Exhibition held at Midrand in July 1999. The standard was issued as a Code of Practice and, as such, is to be used as a guideline; it is not a statutory requirement to which Water Supply Authorities (WSA’s) must adhere. The standard covers the management, administration and operational functions required by WSA’s in order to account for potable water within distribution systems and to apply corrective actions to reduce and control unaccounted-for water (UAW) or Non-Revenue Water (NRW). The aim of the standard is stated as being the presentation of a uniform approach for all WSA’s to: • • • • • • • Establish a strategic plan for the management of potable water delivery; Review an existing management programme; Offer direction for the implementation of such a plan; Quantify the extent and cost of NRW in potable water distribution systems; Determine the appropriate resources required for the operation of those programmes; Establish accurate accounting for potable water; and Reduce NRW. 5.3.2 Basic Terminology The list of standard definitions used in the Code of Practice is exhaustive. However, some of the more fundamental definitions used in this report have been included below for ease of reference and understanding: • • • • • • Leakage (volume): that part of unaccounted-for water that escapes or leaks other than as a result of a deliberate or controllable action over a specified period. Loss: the volume of water that flows through a given section of a pipe during a specified time interval and that is not consumed or used as a result of deliberate or controllable action. Loss Rate: the volume rate of flow (through a given section of a pipe) of water that is not being consumed or used as a result of a deliberate or controllable action. Minimum Night Flow Rate (Qmnf): the lowest consistently repeatable flow rate into an area, district or zone, measured during the period of lowest consumption (typically from midnight to 04h00), and which includes legitimate consumption, leakage on premises and leakage from the distribution system. Net minimum Night Flow Rate; Minimum Night Flow Loss Rate (Qmnfl): the flow rate obtained by subtracting any legitimate consumption rate at the time of the minimum night flow rate measurement, from the minimum night flow rate Qmnf. Specific Loss Rate (Qsl, Qsp or Qsc): the loss rate (determined in litres per hour) divided respectively by the total length of piping (in kilometres), by the number of properties or by the number of connections. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 12 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • Unaccounted-for Water (Volume) Vuaw: the difference between the measured volume of water put into the supply and distribution system and the total volume of water measured to authorised consumers whose fixed property address appears on the official list of the WSA. Water Balance: the difference between the measured volume of potable water put into a water distribution system and the total volume of potable water measured at any intermediate point in the water distribution system. Effectively, a statement setting out the amount of water flowing in and water flowing out on an area-by-area basis. 5.3.3 Results Presentation The Code of Practice has developed its own set of results that are unique to South Africa and local conditions. In line with international practice, the Code of Practice clearly states that the use of percentages should never be used to quantify water losses. However, the formulae used to quantify losses are specific loss rates and comparative ratios. The preferred term for presenting results of analysis is Specific Loss Rate. Specific Loss Rates, as described above, can be expressed as a function of the length of reticulation mains, number of properties or number of connections, depending on the availability and accuracy of system information. Whenever required, values for specific loss rates can be established for each management district, subdistrict and zone where permanent meters have been installed, by logging the flowmeter for a short time period. The specific loss rate values for all areas should be plotted on a monthly graph to observe leakage trends for each area. All specific loss rate values should be expressed in the same units (for example, cubic metres per hour per kilometre) and ranked in descending order. It is preferable that these values come from the latest measurement cycle. The area with the highest specific loss rate will also have the highest water losses. This ranking will provide the basis for scheduling intervention, maintenance or repir work in the zone. The Comparative Ratio (Ram) is a useful action indicator that compares the average daily demand (Qad) to the minimum night flow rate (Qmnf) for any zone under analysis, and is provided by using the formula Ram = Qad/Qmnf. It is a quick indicator that provides a “state of health” snapshot with the interpretation being that the closer Ram approaches the value 1, the worse is the condition of the distribution system. 5.4 General Approach The implementation of any water loss management programme is multi-phased. The ultimate objective of any such initiative must be to reduce unnecessary distribution losses to an economical minimum while maximising revenues from customers. One such way of monitoring any water utility’s success in this regard is by compiling a monthly or annual water balance. A number of performance indicators can be determined from this water balance to identify progress in minimizing water loss in its various components. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 13 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water The water balance can be prepared in either a “top-down” or “bottom-up” approach. The “topdown” approach is largely a desktop exercise whereby generally, high-level information from readily available documentation is collected and reviewed to prepare a water balance. Typical data included in this approach is bulk water volume (treated and/or purchased), customer billing volumes, leak repair summaries meter calibration tests, fire hydrant use etc. The “top-down” approach, while approximate in its reliability, can be compiled relatively quickly and is usually advisable for utilities preparing their first water balance. The “bottom-up” approach involves taking field measurements and conducting audits, investigations and research into the policy and practices of the water utility. This is necessary to extract the explicit knowledge on the total variety of water use and losses. The use of night flow analysis to obtain inferred measurements of leakage is an example of using actual field measurements in the “bottom up” approach to replace estimates of distribution losses used in a “top down” approach. The “bottom-up” approach improves the accuracy of the water balance in reflecting the true water delivery and billing process. However, it requires more time and resources to conduct field measurements and research to gain the greater level of information required to improve the water balance. However, no detailed or accurate field measurement were made available during the compilation of this Master Plan, so all water balances have been prepared based on the “top down” approach. The three phases that will be adopted while implementing the 5-year NRW strategy will be: • • • System assessment Intervention Operation and Maintenance The primary focus of the three phases is to understand the distribution system, water use and losses while at the same time reduce both real and apparent losses. This approach has been indicated in Figure 5. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 14 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water TIME +++++ System Assessment Distribution System Analysis Billing Database Analysis Site inspection Objective 1 Preliminary field measurements Objective 2 Intervention Real Loss Reduction Apparent Loss Reduction Operation & Maintenance Real Loss Control Apparent Loss Control Field verification Field verification Field verification Objective 3 Supply extent verification Infrastructure improvements (creation of zones) Baseline measurements +++++ TIME Data analysis Fixed-outlet pressure reduction Recommendations Recommendations Preparation of IWA Water Balance and Key Performance Indicators Advanced pressure management Active leak detection and repair Level of service review (pressure zones) Sustained monitoring and determination of Economic Level of Intervention Public standpipe control Illegal connections Meter reading Monitoring of Selected Key Performance Indicators Database maintenance Policy enforcement Bulk meter calibration Monitoring of IWA Water Balance and Key Performance Indicators Reporting Figure 5: Amajuba Water Loss Management Project Approach 5.5 Methodology Used for the Amajuba District Municipality Water Balance JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 15 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water The water balance in the Amajuba District Municipality was completed using the “top down” approach at this stage. The following steps are followed for completing the water balance in this way: Step 1: Step 2: Step 3: Step 4: Step 5: Step 6: Step 7: Step 8: the System Input Volume is calculated and included in the water balance the components of the Billed Authorised Consumption were identified, calculated and summed up. These included the Billed Metered Consumption, Free Basic Water (consumption <=6kl/month, within the allocated consumer quota, majority being consumption of <=1kl/day on average), Metered Municipal Consumption and Metered Standpipes. The BAC is the Revenue Water in the water balance the volume of Non-Revenue Water is calculated by subtracting the Revenue Water from the System Input Volume the components of the Unbilled Authorised Consumption were identified, calculated and summed up. These included Unmetered Municipal Use (firefighting, scouring etc) and Unmetered Standpipes’ consumption the volumes of the Billed Authorised Consumption and Unbilled Authorised Consumption are summed up to get the Authorised Consumption value. Water Losses are then calculated as the difference between System Input Volume and Authorised Consumption the Real Losses are calculated by using IWA best practice even though at this stage, no field pressure and flow measurements were undertaken to determine Minimum Night Flows and Average Zone Pressures to aid in Real Loss determination. 80% of water losses were estimated to account for the real losses. These were then input into a minimum night flow analysis model and iteration conducted to determine the best real figures to be presented. The real losses comprised of Mains and Distribution leaks, reservoir overflows and service connection leaks. the Metering Inaccuracies are calculated using best known practice, approximated at 3.5% of the BAC, and the volume subtracted from Apparent Losses to get Unauthorised Consumption 6. Non-Revenue Water Within Amajuba District Municipality 6.1 Definition and Extent of Area of Operation The Amajuba District Municipality is the Water Services Authority located in the north-western corner of KwaZulu-Natal and comprises of three Local Municipalities of Newcastle (KZ252), Utrecht (KZ253) and Dannhauser (KZ254). However, on instruction from the Client, this report only includes a Master Plan and information for the Utrecht and Dannhauser areas of jurisdiction. The ADM region comprises of a combination of urban, peri-urban and rural settlements. The population figures for the District have been included in Table 1. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 16 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Municipality Dannhauser Municipality Newcastle Municipality Emadlangeni (Utrecht) Municipality Total Population Estimate 97 602 364 244 40 316 502 162 Source: WSDP 2009/10 Amajuba DM Report Table 1: Amajuba District Population Estimate Dannhauser and Utrecht Municipalities have four potable water schemes – Dannhauser, Utrecht, Durnacol and Hattingspruit. The Durnacol Supply System obtains raw water from the Chelmsford Dam which is pumped to the Durnacol raw water reservoir. This raw water reservoir gravity feeds into the Durnacol Water Treatment Plant. Treated water is gravity fed through a single outlet that splits and feeds two storage reservoirs. These two reservoirs feed an outlet manifold which has three metered outlets supplying the reticulation system to consumers. The System Input Volumes included in this report are determined from these three outlet meters. The Dannhauser Supply System is also supplied from the Chelmsford Dam via the Durnacol raw water reservoir, which also supplies the Dannhauser Water Treatment Plant. Treated water departs through two bulk mains and is pumped into two treated water storage reservoirs which in turn supply the reticulation system. The System Input Volumes included in this report are determined from the two meters at the pump station. The Utrecht Supply System is supplied from the Nywerheid and Dorp Dams via the Utrecht Water Treatment Plant. Once water has been treated, it leaves via three pumped outlets, two of which supply one storage reservoir. The System Input Volume is determined from the existing meters on these three outlets. Consumers are supplied from two storage reservoirs which are interlinked before feeding the reticulation network. The Hattingspruit Supply System is supplied from Newcastle’s Biggarsberg Water Treatment Plant through Glencoe 2 Reservoir. The line that supplies Glencoe 2 Reservoir has a metered off-take (from which the System Input Volume is determined) that supplies Hattingspruit Reservoir. From the off-take to the Hattingspruit Reservoir there are at least seven off-takes to small settlements which form part of the Hattingspruit system. 6.2 Relationships with Other Departments ADM has for some time recognised the importance of minimising system losses although had exercised limited focused intervention to keep real losses under control. ADM has allocated the responsibility for WC/WDM to its existing Directorate: Engineering Services. The structure of the entire ADM Water Services Branch (senior posts only) has been included in Figure 6. Reporting and management within the Directorate: Special Projects currently takes place directly from Manager to General Manager as the Senior Manager post is currently vacant. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 17 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Due to the current environment, WC/WDM enjoys a relatively high profile with direct access to influential decision makers. Also, the working relationship between engineering Services and other Directorates appears to be beneficial, although a lack of understanding of WC/WDM and NRW to any WSP/WSA’s operation appears to be present, particularly with those directly involved with system operations. Director Engineering Services (Sect. 57) Admin Officer (06) Deputy Director Engineering (01) PMU Assistant Director (03) Operations Assistant Director (03) Assistant Director Compliance & Data Analyst (03) Assistant Director Project Finance (03) Admin Officer Projects (06) VACANT Operations Manager (04) ISD Facilitator (05) PMU Senior Eng. Technician (04) Operations Technician (05) VACANT Process Technician (05) Water Tanker Driver (11) PMU Senior Eng. Technician (04) Infrastructure & Works Manager (04) ISD Facilitator (05) ISD Facilitator (05) Water Tanker Driver (11) Figure 6: Current Organogram for Engineering Services 6.3 Non-Revenue Water Areas of Influence Non-Revenue Water has the potential to be central to how a WSP/WSA operates, as the optimising of operational and financial efficiency centres around the level of losses experienced by any distribution system. The concepts of Impact, Influence and Dependency of NRW activities must therefore be addressed at strategic (Master Plan) level. For the purposes of this Master Plan, the following definitions apply: • • “Impact” refers to the impact of other areas of operation/activity on levels of NRW “influence” refers to what influence NRW has on other areas of operation/activity JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 18 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • “Dependency” refers to the reliance of NRW activities on external roleplayers to achieve NRW targets Non-Revenue Water areas of influence include: • • • • • • • System knowledge Operations Design Maintenance Legal/Policy Finance/budget Organisational Design and Human Resources These have been rated according to their Impact, Influence and Dependency into five categories of Minimal (1), Low (2), Moderate (3), High (4) or Significant (5). The current perceived rating is represented in Table 2 and combined together in the radar graph Figure 7 after. Service Delivery Aspect System Knowledge Operations Design Maintenance Customer Services Legal/Policy Finances/Budget Organisational Design & HR Impact 1 3 2 2 1 1 2 1 Field (Baseline) Influence 2 3 2 2 2 1 2 2 Dependency 4 4 3 3 4 3 5 3 Table 2: WC/WDM and Non-Revenue Water Area of Influence JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 19 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Amajuba District Municipality - Strategic NRW Master Plan Influence of NRW on Other Areas of Operation System Knowledge 5 4 Organisational Design & HR Operations 3 2 1 Finances/Budget Design 0 Legal Maintenance Customer Services Field (Baseline) Influence Field (Target +5 years) Influence Figure 7: Current Non-Revenue Water Area of Influence This strategic mapping exercise has presented the following scenarios: • • • 6.4 WC/WDM and NRW activities should have a relatively high influence on system operation and design Other activities outside the control of WC/WDM and NRW do have a significant impact on levels of NRW NRW is almost exclusively reliant on external roleplayers to meet and sustain NRW targets Profile of Non-Revenue Water In spite of the relatively good relationship enjoyed with other Water Services Departments, the profile of NRW within ADM is not particularly high. The profile of NRW, when raised, is more often than not in a negative sense, usually following a negative incident, and normally addressed to the WSP, uThukela Water. The Directorate: Engineering Services is currently responsible for any NRW activity as well as any other ADM special project (and then not restricted to water projects). The Directorate is headed by a Manager (with part-time attention and focus on NRW) and one Deputy-Director whose portfolio includes WC/WDM. These resources are jointly responsible for the monitoring and evaluation of all NRW reduction activities implemented within ADM. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 20 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 7. Review of Non-Revenue Water Activities to Date The Amajuba District Municipality (ADM) has not been actively implementing a Water Loss Reduction Programme, although activities seem to have been restricted to a monitoring and evaluation programme that identified and monitored areas of concern rather than actively reducing the perceived levels of water losses in the ADM areas of supply. As part of ongoing system operations and maintenance, it is unclear if infrastructure that has exceeded its design service life is being replaced (e.g. mains replacement), but this is normally undertaken by the WSP, uThukela Water, as is any other perceived operations, maintenance and water loss reduction activity. 8. Situation Analysis – Terms and Current Non-Revenue Water Information 8.1 Source Data Supplied for Master Plan The following data was provided by Amajuba District Municipality as part of this project: • • • • • • • 8.2 Cadastral layout in GIS shapefile format 5m interval contours in GIS format Last 5 financial years’ billing database (meter readings) Supply reservoir information Amajuba Bulk water services master plan System Input volumes covering last five years for four systems, and from 2005 for rest of the schemes Number of and consumption volumes from standpipes Integrity of Information Supplied for Master Plan The Confidence Grading System was applied to the source data provided and the results have been included in Table 3. Data Description Data Confidence Grade GIS Cadastral 5m interval contours Billing database Supply reservoir information ADM bulk water services masterplan System input volumes Standpipes’ numbers and volumes A2 A1 A2 A2 A2 C2 C5 Table 3: System Data Confidence Grading JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 21 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water The confidence grading system as described in this section applies to the source data or raw data that was used as the basis for the analysis of results and has been included as an indication of the quality or integrity of information. The integrity of data does have an impact on the accuracy of the analyses carried out as part of the scope of work but this shall be dealt with by applying 95% Confidence Levels to the indicators and water balance in this section. The worst affected were the SIV, especially from the rural schemes. For purposes of this report, the rural consumption of 25l/p/d with 40% losses addition has been adopted, as was utilized in the preparation of the ADM WSDP. 8.3 Billing Database Analysis The integrity of evaluation of revenue water in any water balance is dependent on that of the billing database being analysed. The following actions were undertaken to establish the reliability of the billing database received from uThukela Water, who are responsible for the biling of all customers within Amajuba District Municipality: • • • • • • Confirmation that the billing codes received covering the entire database were correct Discussion with the WSP water supply managers to shed light on degree of consumers bypassing meters Confirmation that every meter is read regularly (monthly) Determination that each metered property has only one meter – though this scenario is currently changing Confirmation that there were few cases of replaced meters still existing in the database – this affected its 95% confidence level grading negatively Confirmation that the number of registered connections/meters averaged around the 4500 figure The entire ADM billing database was received from the Finance Department of uThukela Water. The spreadsheets were stripped of all financial values and contained monthly meter reads/ consumption figures per registered consumers only, for the 2009/2010 financial year. These data sets were cleaned and allocated to the various supply zones/schemes using a special coding existing on the database. Bulk meters, municipal meters and communal standpipe meters were not present in this database. 8.3.1 Analysis of Billed Consumption Trends The Billed Metered Consumption per supply system (where billing data was reflective), for the 2009/10 financial year has been summarised in Tables 4 and 5 and presented graphically in Figures 8 to 22. A detailed analysis of these figures has been included in Annexure A hereto. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 22 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Supply Area Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Total for Amajuba DM Total Number of Billing Records 17 004 11 316 8 232 1 320 37 872 10 668 6 988 5 948 779 Total Number of Unread Meters 2 599 1 531 555 209 Total Number of Blank Records 3 600 2 768 1 700 324 Total Number of Records with Zero Consumption 137 29 29 8 24 383 4 894 8 392 203 Total Number of Actual Readings Table 4: Billing Database Integrity Analysis – 2009/10 Financial Year Figure 8: Billing Database Integrity for Amajuba District Municipality – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 23 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 9: Billing Database Integrity for Utrecht Local Municipality – 2009/10 Figure 10: Billing Database Integrity for Dannhauser Local Municipality – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 24 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 11: Billing Database Integrity for Durnacol – 2009/10 Figure 12: Billing Database Integrity for Hattingspruit – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 25 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Supply Area Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Total for Amajuba DM Total Number of Records <6 kl/month 1 055 674 384 68 Total Number of Records >6 kl/month 273 237 269 38 2 181 817 Totals Supply Area 1 328 911 653 106 Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Total for Amajuba DM 2 998 Volume of Records <6 kl/month Volume of Records >6 kl/month Totals 5 870 4 128 2 833 249 19 734 15 168 12 419 4 595 25 604 19 296 15 252 4 844 13 081 51 915 64 996 Table 5: Billing Database Analysis: Free Basic Water Allocations – 2009/10 Financial Year Figure 13: Free Basic Water Allocation for Amajuba District Municipality (Number of Records) – 2009/10 Figure 14: Free Basic Water Allocation for Amajuba District Municipality (Volume) – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 26 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 15: Free Basic Water Allocation for Utrecht Local Municipality (Number of Records) – 2009/10 Figure 16: Free Basic Water Allocation for Utrecht Local Municipality (Volume) – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 27 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 17: Free Basic Water Allocation for Dannhauser Local Municipality (Number of Records) – 2009/10 Figure 18: Free Basic Water Allocation for Dannhauser Local Municipality (Volume) – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 28 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 19: Free Basic Water Allocation for Durnacol (Number of Records) – 2009/10 Figure 20: Free Basic Water Allocation for Durnacol (Volume) – 2009/10 JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 29 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 21: Free Basic Water Allocation for Hattingspruit (Number of Records) – 2009/10 Figure 20: Free Basic Water Allocation for Hattingspruit (Volume) – 2009/10 8.4 Water Balance Water Balances were calculated per System Supply Zone for the 2009/10 Financial Year, with additional information and explanation provided for each water balance component in the following sections. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 30 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 8.4.1 System Input Volume The System Input Volume (SIV) is defined as the total volume of water entering a discreet consumption zone. ADM’s SIV was derived from spreadsheets obtained from uThukela Water (Table 6 below). The data obtained had missing monthly gaps and thus use of averages was applied. The full interactive spreadsheet has been attached hereto in Annexure A. uThukela Water Supply Zone Supply Zone 13 Supply Zone 13 Supply Zone 13 Supply Zone 13 Total for ADM System Input Volume (kl/month) 70 708 50 428 34 594 8 446 164 177 Supply Area Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±10,0% ±10,0% ±10,0% Table 6: Amajuba District Systems/ Schemes’ System Input Volumes 8.4.2 Billed Authorised Consumption Billed Authorised Consumption (BAC) constitutes the water balance components from which revenue could be generated and has been divided into four components: • • Metered customer consumption Consumption within Free Basic Water Allocation – 6 kl/month/household The first two were derived from individual meter connections’ data. Table 12 contains the breakdown of Billed and Unbilled Authorised Consumption for each of the individual supply systems. Supply Area Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Total for Amajuba District Billed Metered Consumption (kl/annum) Billed Unmetered Consumption (kl/annum) Unmetered Municipal Use (kl/annum) 307 248 231 552 183 024 58 128 0 0 0 0 8 485 6 051 4 151 1 014 Potential Unbilled Unmetered Consumption (kl/annum) 67 968 118 126 86 386 14 168 779 952 0 19 701 286 649 Table 2: Amajuba District Systems/ Schemes’ Billed Authorised Consumptions JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 31 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 8.4.3 Unbilled Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption was primarily made up of all Amajuba District Municipality’s sanctioned devices that provided predominantly rural settlements with some form of water supply. The physical devices included: • • Unmetered municipal use Unmetered standpipes Other UAC components that were also identified included fire fighting, emergency drought relief, scouring and sewerage pump stations and treatment works’ usage. An evaluation of volumes from previous Amajuba District Water Audit Reports indicated minimal consumption through these devices, and thus were not included as part of this report. The average Unmetered Municipal Consumption was assumed to represent 1% of the SIV per system/scheme. The Unmetered Standpipes’ connections were calculated as the average of metered consumptions through metered standpipes within the respective supply zones. The individual systems’ the Unbilled Authorised Consumptions for the 2009/10 FY have been included in Table 12. 8.4.4 Apparent Losses Apparent Losses are comprised of Unauthorised Consumption and Metering Inaccuracies. Unauthorised consumptions are perceived to be from illegal connections while metering inaccuracies are perceived losses arising from the deterioration of average meter accuracy due to normal wear and tear that either under-reads, or in exceptional cases over-reads the volume of water used by the customer. This factor is greatly reliant on supply water quality as well as size and type of meter. During the Master Plan investigation it was established that majority of the consumer meters were of 15mm diameter and were installed in the early 80s, over 25 years ago. International statistics indicate that an accuracy of ± 3.5% of the BAC is sufficient for an area with Amajuba’s characteristics. The 2009/10 FY apparent losses analyses have been provided in Table 13. System Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Total for Amajuba District Annual Unauthorised or Illegal Consumption (kl) 63 575 32 780 17 576 3 044 116 974 Annual Metering Inaccuracies (kl) Annual Apparent Losses (kl) 6 145 4 631 3 660 1 163 69 720 37 411 21 236 4 207 15 599 132 573 Table 3: Amajuba District Municipality Systems/ Schemes’ Apparent Losses Analyses JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 32 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 8.4.5 Real Losses Real Losses are determined from leaks/losses from mains and service connections as well as reservoir overflows. Mains leaks and service connection leaks are calculated from analysing minimum night flows (MNF) from storage reservoirs. The two can be separated into individual components by using freely available software (such as SANFLOW developed by the South African Water Research Commission). Not all MNF consists exclusively of losses and/or leaks – in some cases there are legitimate night-time consumers and intermittent night usage from users which form part of the recorded night flow rates. Leaks on private property which passes through a customer meter are also regarded as being part of consumption. It is therefore necessary to “unbundle” MNF rates into different components to fully understand the quantity of real losses. The components of MNF have been represented schematically in Figure 21. MNF is comprised of the following components: background losses, normal night use and excess night flow. Of these, only background losses and excess night flow make up real losses. Unavoidable Annual Real Losses Current Annual Real Losses Figure 21: Components of Minimum Night Flow Although no field-work to measure MNF was carried out at this stage, an estimation of 85% of water losses was adopted to represent the MNF. The summarised results of these analyses have been included in Table 14. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 33 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 34 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water MNF estimation (m³/hr) System Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Entire ADM Totals 174,0 590,0 66,1 80,5 910,6 Estimated Background Losses (m³/hr) 60,0 155,8 25,3 30,0 271,10 Estimated Normal Night Use (m³/hr) 22,3 33,5 8,5 11,5 75,8 Expected Night Flow (m³/hr) Excess Night Flow (m³/hr) 82,2 189,3 33,8 71,7 377,0 91,7 400,7 32,3 39,0 563,7 Table 14: Real Loss Estimate and Analysis per Supply System The data included in the table above has been represented in m3/hr. Under standard IWA guidelines, these cannot be directly translated into 24-hour daily figures. This is because the rate of leakage varies during the day as the average system supply pressure changes from demand fluctuations. The Night-Day Factor (NDF) is the ratio between the leakage rates at night in (m3/hr) and the average rate over 24 hours (m3/day). Due to lack of system pressure information, the NDF could not be established and thus the real loss figures generated are slightly on the higher side, though realistic. 8.4.6 Summarised Individual System Water Balances The 2009/10 financial year water balances for each individual supply system were created in the manner described in the previous sections and have been summarised in Tables 15 – 18 below, complete with 95% confidence levels. The full water balances in IWA format with 95% confidence levels per system/scheme have been attached hereto in Annexure A. Water Balance Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Water Losses Non-Revenue Water 2009/10 Financial Year Volume (kl) 848 501 307 248 76 453 69 720 395 080 464 800 541 253 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±22,3% ±101,8% ±7,7% ±16,6% ±14,6% Table 4: Utrecht Supply System 2009/10 Financial Year Water Balance JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 35 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Water Balance Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Water Losses Non-Revenue Water 2009/10 Financial Year Volume (kl) 605 133 231 552 124 177 37 411 211 993 249 404 373 581 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±23,8% ±120,2% ±7,1% ±19,0% ±15,0% Table 5: Dannhauser Supply System 2009/10 Financial Year Water Balance Water Balance Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Water Losses Non-Revenue Water 2009/10 Financial Year Volume (kl) 415 133 183 024 90 537 21 236 120 337 141 573 232 109 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±23,9% ±138,1% ±6,5% ±21,4% ±16,1% Table 6: Durnacol Supply System 2009/10 Financial Year Water Balance Water Balance Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Water Losses Non-Revenue Water 2009/10 Financial Year Volume (kl) 101 355 58 128 15 182 4 207 23 838 28 044 43 227 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±23,4% ±174,4% ±6,7% ±26,8% ±19,2% Table 8: Hattingspruit Supply System 2009/10 Financial Year Water Balance 8.4.7 Entire Amajuba District Municipality’s Systems Combined The water balance for the entire Amajuba District Municipality has been summarised in Table 19. Water Balance Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Total Water Losses Non-Revenue Water 2009/10 Financial Year Volume (kl) 1 970 123 779 952 306 350 123 573 751 248 883 821 1 190 171 95% Confidence Level ±10,0% ±10,0% ±23,4% ±118,2% ±7,3% ±18,8% ±15,2% Table 7: Entire Amajuba District Past and Current Water Balances: Simplified Presentation JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 36 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water The complete individual and combined component-based IWA format water balances with 95% confidence level grading for each of the systems have been compiled and have been attached as Annexure A hereto. The application of 95% confidence limits not only allows the water balance to actually balance within statistically determined ranges, but it also assists in determining which components of the water balance are weakest in terms of reliability and accuracy of input. These water balances help provide a greater understanding of each of the supply systems/ waterworks and also assist in the preparation of specific intervention strategies and cost/benefit calculations which shall be dealt with in more detail in the following sections. The current entire ADM’s water balance has been provided in Figure 22. Billed Metered Consumption 779 952 m3/year ± 10% Authorised Consumption 1 086 302 m3/year ± 9.8% Billed Authorised Consumption 779 952 m3/year ± 10.0% Billed Unmetered Consumption m3/year ± 5% Revenue Water 779 952 m3/year ± 10.0% Unmetered Municipal Use 19 701 m3/year ± 20% Unbilled Authorised Consumption 306 350 m3/year ± 23.4% System Input Volume 1 970 123 m3/year ± 10.0% Unbilled Unmetered 286 649 m3/year ± 25% Illegal Consumption 116 974 m3/year 134.0% Apparent Losses 132 573 m3/year ± 118.2% Water Losses 883 821 m3/year ± 18.8% Real Losses 751 248 m3/year ± 7.3% Non-Revenue Water 1 190 171 m3/year ± 15.2% Metering Inaccuracies 15 599 m3/year ± 2.0% Mains and Dsitribution Leaks 539 863 m3/year ± 10% Reservoir Overflows 7 512 m3/year ± 5% Service Connection Leaks 203 873 m3/year ± 5% Figure 22: Entire ADM Current Water Balance with 95% Confidence Levels: Standard Presentation 8.5 Financial Analysis The purpose of this report is to table the extent of Non-Revenue Water in the ADM water supply system and not necessarily to quantify the revenue generating components of the system. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 37 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water With respect to the NRW components determined from the component based water balance for the entire district, the costs to ADM that are being experienced have been included in Table 20 based on the average bulk production/purchase cost of R 3,00/kl. Annual Volumes (kl) Water Balance Component System Input Volume Unbilled Authorised Consumption Unmetered Municipal Use Unbilled Unmetered Apparent Losses Unauthorised Consumption Metering Inaccuracies Real Losses Mains Leaks and Bursts Reservoir Overflows Service Connection Leaks Total Non- Revenue Water Annual Cost to ADM @ R3,00/kl 1 970 123 R5 910 369 306 350 19 701 286 649 132 573 116 974 15 599 751 248 539 863 7 512 203 873 1 190 171 R 919 050 R 59 103 R 859 947 R 397 719 R 350 922 R 46 797 R2 253 744 R1 619 589 R 22 536 R 611 619 R3 570 513 Table 20: Financial Implications of Non-Revenue Water Components 8.5.1 Cost of Water per System The Annual Total cost of supplying water to the ADM per system has been summarised in Table 21. These costs are derived from SIV volumes during the current 2009/10 FY. Annual System Input Volume (kl) Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattinspruit 848 501 605 133 415 133 101 355 Entire ADM Totals Annual SIV Costs R 2 545 503 R 1 815 399 R 1 245 399 R 304 065 R 5 910 369 Table 8: Annual Cost of Waters per System (Current) 8.5.2 Cost per Water Balance Component (Current) The Annual Non-Revenue Water costs per system within the AMAJUBA District Municipality have been summarised in Table 22. The ranking column grades the comparison inefficiencies of the various systems. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 38 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Annual Unbilled Authorised Consumption Cost Annual Apparent Losses Costs Annual Real Losses Costs Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit R 229 359 R 372 531 R 271 611 R 45 546 R 209 160 R 112 233 R 63 708 R 12 621 R 1 185 240 R 635 979 R 361 011 R 71 514 R 1 623 759 R 1 120 743 R 696 327 R 129 681 Entire ADM Totals R 919 050 R 397 719 R 2 253 744 R 3 570 510 Total Annual NRW Costs NRW/SIV Costs Ranking 64% 62% 56% 43% 1 2 3 4 Table 9: Annual Cost of Non-Revenue Water per System (Current) 8.6 Key Performance Indicators The key performance indicators for the individual systems within ADM and their ranking have been included in Table 23. Total Water Losses System litres/conn/day w.s.p. Non-Revenue Water by Volume Inefficiency of Use Ranking 1 2 3 4 Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit 74,9 60,4 47,1 58,2 63,8% 61,7% 55,9% 42,6% 46,6% 35,0% 28,9% 23,5% Entire ADM 64,0 60,4% 38,1% Table 10: Key Performance Indicators (per supply system) based on 2009/10 Financial Year Data 8.6.1 Operational Indicators The IWA Water Losses Task Force originally compiled an international data set of 27 water supply systems from 20 countries. As and when information from other systems becomes available, this data set is updated. Initial analysis of this data has resulted in the calculation of typical ranges of the recommended IWA performance indicators, which have been included in Table 24. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 39 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Typical Range Performance Indicator Excellent Good/Fair Below Average 30 to 100 100 to 200 >200 <2.0 2.0 to 5.0 >5.0 30 to 100 100 to 200 >200 1.0 to 1.5 1.5 to 3.5 >3.5 Current Annual Real Losses (CARL) when system pressurized (litres/service connection/day) Current Annual Real Losses (CARL) when system pressurized (litres/service connection/day/m of pressure Unavoidable Annual Real Losses (UARL) (litres/service connection/day) Infrastructure Leakage Index (ILI) = CARL/UARL Table 11: Typical Ranges of IWA Performance Indicators It must be noted that the IWA Key Performance Indicators contained in the above table are a function of the number of service connections in the distribution system. The technical indicators CARL and ILI have only been proven if there are greater than 10 000 connections in the zone being analysed, and if the service connection density is greater than 20 connections/kilometre of reticulation main. ADM has approximately 37 500 connections in total, has a service connection density of approximately 20 connections/km and therefore does not strictly adhere to the parameters of accepted analysis. In spite of this, however, the current rating of the ADM system KPI’s to the international data set is “below average”. The combined current key performance indicators are summarised as follows (all KPI calculations have been compiled and attached in Annexure A hereto): Inefficiency of Use of Water Resources Total Water Losses Current Annual Real Losses Apparent Losses Non-Revenue Water by Volume JC200807H003 v1.0 38,1% 189,9 m3/service connection/year or 520,2 litres/service connection/day 161,4 m3/service connection/year or 442,2 litres/service connection/day 28,5 m3/service connection/year or 78,0 litres/service connection/day 60,4% Page 40 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 8.7 Demand Projections Should the ADM system be allowed to grow in line with current growth projections (as included in the Bulk Water Master Plan) and taking into account system attrition i.e. the rate of deterioration of infrastructure, the projected water balance components have been included in Table 25. This “do nothing” approach (Scenario 1) quantifies important figures in terms of reducing NRW volumes as any intervention proposed will first and foremost need to overcome the impact of normal growth and attrition before the benefits of intervention will become evident. A detailed breakdown and water balances for the individual systems for this particular scenario have been included in Annexure B. Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Water Losses Non-Revenue Water Inefficiency of water resource use (%) NRW by volume (%) Current WB Projected Medium Term Volumes: No Intervention kl/year 1 970 123 779 952 95% CI ±10.0% ±10.0% kl/year 2 826 920 962 042 95% CI ±6.2% ±10.0% 306 350 132 573 751 248 883 821 1 190 171 ±23.4% ±118.2% ±7.3% ±18.8% ±15.2% 390 988 168 532 1 305 427 1 473 959 1 864 948 ±23.4% ±17.7% ±8.4% ±7.7% ±7.8% 38.1% 60.4% 46.1% 65.9% Table 25: Entire Amajuba District Projected Water Balance Components – Without NRW Reduction Intervention (Scenario 1) Scenario 1 (no intervention) determined that System Input Volume across the entire ADM area of supply would increase approximately 43% to 2 827 Ml/year and NRW by volume would increase approximately 56% to 1 865 Ml/year within the 5-year Master Plan period. The Inefficiency of Use of Water Resources would increase to 46% and NRW by Volume increase to 66%. 9. Key Challenges Identified in Implementing Non-Revenue Water Activities The following points were noted as challenges that will/are being encountered in the process of implementing NRW strategies: i) SIV Authenticity: The volumes that were recorded as bulk flows into the system had varying ranges of accuracy, as some were either estimates or the meters were not working properly. For any NRW strategy to succeed, the SIV and MNF determination must be JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 41 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water ii) iii) iv) v) vi) vii) viii) ix) x) xi) xii) 10. accurate. Any gains in the system can only be measured if benchmarking from these two volumes are correct. Standpipes Metering: Volumes going through free standpipes must be accurately established. Ideally every standpipe must have an individual meter but if this is constrained by funding, then each meter must serve as few standpipes as possible, and/or length of pipe between the meter and the various standpipes must be kept to a minimum. Inadequate Consumer Meters: Certain systems/schemes have a low percentage of registered consumer meters, making it difficult to establish BAC. The overall percentages of registered and read meters to number of connections need to be increased. Inadequate background data on individual supply schemes/systems (in some instances even simple system characteristics were difficult to obtain) Lack of reliable baseline field measurements such as flow (System Input Volume and Minimum Night Flows) and pressure Lack of understanding of current best practice, definitions, theory and application of theory Certain confusion around the extent, constitution and reliability of Billed Authorised Consumption volumes Lack of management (and number) of external professional service providers, who ostensibly operate in isolation Lack of understanding and implementation of appropriate design standards that could minimise NRW volumes even at design stage Dedicated Client capacity constraints and reliance on external Consultants Lack of clarity on available MTEF budgets for NRW reduction activities Market-related constraints for specialist service providers (such as leak detection contractors) due to current industry boom. Strategic Plan Approach and Methodology 10.1 Overall Target for Non-Revenue Water Reduction Following the methodology used as a basis for preparing the component-based water balance, the Non-Revenue Water reduction strategy and intervention guidelines have been proposed for each of the readily identifiable and unique water balance components. The recommendations contained in this section apply to either or both of operational best practice or targeted reduction of certain Non-Revenue Water components. Once the strategy for reducing Non-Revenue Water has been tabled, the estimated effect of the intervention and financial cost:benefit analyses will be tabled in later sections. This section is therefore limited to detailing the scope of recommended interventions – financial implications are tabled in the following section. An interactive spreadsheet has been developed that summarizes the recommended intervention strategy, anticipated impact of intervention on Non-Revenue Water and economic evaluation of all recommended interventions. This spreadsheet has been included in Annexure D and has been designed to act as a stand-alone spreadsheet that encompasses all information and recommendations contained in this report. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 42 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 10.2 Supply System Description and Operation Dannhauser and Utrecht Municipalities have four potable water schemes – Dannhauser, Utrecht, Durnacol and Hattingspruit. The Durnacol Supply System obtains raw water from the Chelmsford Dam which is pumped to the Durnacol raw water reservoir. This raw water reservoir gravity feeds into the Durnacol Water Treatment Plant. Treated water is gravity fed through a single outlet that splits and feeds two storage reservoirs. These two reservoirs feed an outlet manifold which has three metered outlets supplying the reticulation system to consumers. The System Input Volumes included in this report are determined from these three outlet meters. The Dannhauser Supply System is also supplied from the Chelmsford Dam via the Durnacol raw water reservoir, which also supplies the Dannhauser Water Treatment Plant. Treated water departs through two bulk mains and is pumped into two treated water storage reservoirs which in turn supply the reticulation system. The System Input Volumes included in this report are determined from the two meters at the pump station. The Utrecht Supply System is supplied from the Nywerheid and Dorp Dams via the Utrecht Water Treatment Plant. Once water has been treated, it leaves via three pumped outlets, two of which supply one storage reservoir. The System Input Volume is determined from the existing meters on these three outlets. Consumers are supplied from two storage reservoirs which are interlinked before feeding the reticulation network. The Hattingspruit Supply System is supplied from Newcastle’s Biggarsberg Water Treatment Plant through Glencoe 2 Reservoir. The line that supplies Glencoe 2 Reservoir has a metered off-take (from which the System Input Volume is determined) that supplies Hattingspruit Reservoir. From the off-take to the Hattingspruit Reservoir there are at least seven off-takes to small settlements which form part of the Hattingspruit system. 10.3 Available Non-Revenue Water Reduction Interventions 10.3.1 Real Loss Control Virtually every water distribution system in the world incurs losses through leakage, and those leaks have been present since the systems were first installed or constructed. Leakage losses cannot be completely avoided, although they can be managed to remain within economic limits. To control real or physical losses, it is important to restate the components that make up real losses. In the IWA water balance, real losses are made up of mains leaks, service connection leaks and reservoir overflows, with the first two typically making up the greatest volume of losses. Losses from these elements are the basis for determining the UARL, and the minimizing of these loss components form the basis for determining the economic level of leakage for a water distribution system. The four-component approach to controlling real losses, shown in Figure 23, has been developed as a template for water system operators to maintain economically low levels of leakage over a medium- to long-term period. The core of the graphic represents that any system will incur a JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 43 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water certain amount of recoverable leakage that can be reduced to its economic value with the proper combination of the four leakage controls. Figure 23: The Four Component Approach to the Control of Real Losses 10.3.2 Active Leakage Control Active leakage control consists of the following activities: • • • • • • • regular inspection and sounding of all water main fittings and connections: leakage surveys; leakage modeling via innovative methods such as minimum night flow analysis; metering of individual pressure zones; District Metered Area (DMA) metering: measuring total inflow per day, week or month; continuous or intermittent night flow measurements; short-period measurements at any time of day; temporary placing of leak noise detectors and loggers. The effect of leak run time has been exposed and incorporated as an active leakage control strategy. Leaks left to run long periods of time create large annual loss volumes. In any distribution system, the greatest annual volume of real losses occur from long-running, small-tomedium sized leaks on customer service connections, except at very low densities of service JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 44 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water connections. To achieve successful leakage control, water utilities must be effective and efficient in providing routine surveillance to identify leaks and in executing timely, lasting repairs. 10.3.3 Pressure Management Another major innovation of efficient loss control is pressure management. It is common engineering design of water supply systems that adequate pressure be provided to ensure that a specified minimal level of service is met. However, it is now understood that certain types of leaks are very sensitive to pressure. Excess pressure – which is not always carefully assessed by water system operators – has a cost in terms of higher leakage and unnecessary energy usage. Better understanding high and low pressure variations gives suppliers more control in preventing surging ruptures and backflow conditions, thereby extending the life of infrastructure and safeguarding distribution system water quality. Pressure control has proven to be effective in reducing leakage from “background” leaks, or those leaks that are so small that they are not easily located or repaired through conventional means. The installation of pressure reducing valves (PRV’s) and use of selective pressure reduction during minimum usage nighttime hours is a technique that is effective in economically reducing background leakage. This technique has greatly challenged the traditional concepts of what is regarded as “unavoidable” leakage, and assisted the development of the Unavoidable Annual Real Losses (UARL) calculation. Specifying appropriate pressure control has been found to be one of the most successful and costeffective means of controlling leakage. Pressure management consists of the following activities: • • • • • pressure modeling via innovative methods such as the Fixed and Variable Area Discharge Paths (FAVAD) model; controlling pressure close to, but greater than, the minimum standard of service; operation of discrete pressure zones configured based upon topography or service supply standards; limiting maximal pressure levels or surges in pressure; off-peak pressure reduction where feasible to reduce losses from small “background” leaks. 10.3.4 District Metered Areas (DMA’s) Establishing the practice of discrete zoning or sectorization in large water distribution systems has been an important factor in implementing ongoing active leakage control. By creating district metered areas or DMA’s that range in size from several hundred to several thousand properties each, water usage patterns can be monitored closely to infer leakage rates based upon minimal night flow rates. Establishing DMA’s and utilizing leakage modeling techniques effectively provides a quantitative measure of leakage to the water utility manager. This information is available as the “bottom-up” contribution to the water balance, improving the accuracy and reliability of that document. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 45 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Such measurements also form the basis for leakage reduction targets on a DMA basis. Flexibility exists in the manner in which DMA’s are configured such that possible concerns for fire flow limitations, closed valves and customer usage variations can be safely and cost-effectively managed. 10.3.5 Apparent Loss Control Apparent losses typically don’t carry the tangible impact that is experienced with real losses. Rather, they wield a significant financial effect on both water suppliers as well as customers. Apparent losses also compromise efforts to reliably distinguish actual water consumption from real loss volumes. In the IWA water balance, apparent losses are represented by metering inaccuracies and illegal consumption. Typically, in South African water supply systems, the latter (unauthorized consumption) constitutes the largest volume. Financially, apparent losses represent service rendered without payment recovered. The shortterm economic impact of apparent losses may be much greater than real losses since they occur at the consumer tariff charged to customers, while short-term real losses occur at the marginal or unit cost of water. It is evident that both real and apparent losses have a significant impact on infrastructure development: high real losses result in oversized pipelines and storage facilities, while high apparent losses sacrifice a portion of utility revenue that could be invested in infrastructure needs. Recovering apparent loss can be attractive since it usually offers a speedy payback; controlling apparent losses also improves equity in revenue collection since a portion of apparent losses occur when some active customers are inadvertently left out of the billing system. All nonpaying consumers are effectively subsidized by paying customers, resulting in pressures that exacerbate the need for higher water rates. Similar to real losses, a four-component approach to control apparent losses is offered in Figure 24. The notion that current, economic and unavoidable levels of apparent loss exist for any water system follows the same logic as the assessment of real losses in a water supply system. The four component approach can be used as a guide for any water operator in determining where the greatest amounts of apparent loss are believed to exist, and offers interventions available to reduce overall apparent losses to an appropriate, economic level. The nature of the interventions needed to control apparent loss in water supply systems parallel policies and controls that are used in financial accounting. Many water operators perceive customer meter inaccuracy is the sole “administrative” loss that occurs in water supply systems. While numerous utilities have documented accountability improvements by replacing old, worn residential meters, or “right-sizing” large commercial or industrial meters, it should be recognized that apparent losses have a number components, including: JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 46 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • • • • • Customer meter inaccuracy; usually occurring due to meter wear, malfunction or inappropriate size or type of meter; Data transfer error in getting customer metered usage data into a database or billing system; Data analysis error, including poor estimating procedures used for unmetered or unread accounts; Poor accounting, including lack of controls that ensure accounts exist for all water users and bills are issued or tabulated (even if water is supplied at no cost). This also includes procedural gaps that allow legitimate water users to exist in “non-billed” status; All forms of unauthorized use, including tampering with metering equipment, water taken illegally from fire hydrants, unauthorized taps into service mains or unauthorized restoration of water service connection valves after violation discontinuance by the water supplier; and Weak or non-existent policy, including the often-used practice of not billing/metering municipal-owned or other public buildings, allowing unrestricted use of fire hydrants, lack of enforcement of existing statutes, lack of promotion of the value of water, etc. Figure 24: The Four Component Approach to the Control of Apparent Losses JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 47 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 10.3.6 Authorized Consumption Authorized consumption forms an integral part of the water balance calculations. However, the confirmation of the integrity of the data in the billing database did not form part of this project so all historical and “snapshot” analysis was carried out on the understanding that the billed consumption was as accurate as could be provided. The billing database as provided by ADM was used as the basis for authorized consumption in the water balance calculations. 10.3.7 Unauthorized Consumption Unauthorized consumption could contribute significantly to the water balance and potentially forms the largest component of apparent loss. Unauthorized consumption comprises of both consumers who have registered connections but have bypassed these illegally as well as those consumers who do not have registered connections. In the “top-down” approach of compiling the IWA water balance, the quantification of unauthorized consumption is very subjective and depends entirely on the operator’s feel for the system. The simplest way of determining the quantity of unauthorised consumption is to apply a factor to the entire water losses volume (determined from the water balance by subtracting authorised consumption from the system input volume). 11. Non-Revenue Water Reduction Implementation Strategy 11.1 Non-Revenue Water Interactive Model An interactive spreadsheet has been developed that summarizes the recommended intervention strategy, anticipated impact of intervention on Non-Revenue Water and economic evaluation of all recommended interventions. This spreadsheet has been included in Annexure D and has been designed to act as a stand-alone spreadsheet that encompasses all information and recommendations contained in this report. In accordance with the overall brief, the interactive predictive model was developed in Microsoft Excel that allows flexibility to the Client in determining the output from any number of scenarios on a per system and overall ADM perspective. This allows for the following to be modelled: • • • • • System Input Reduction modelling (budget-dependent) Billing Improvement modelling (budget-dependent) NRW Target establishment, determining target NRW % by volume and budget requirements Maximum achievable NRW % by volume NRW target establishment by cost:benefit ratios Flexibility has been built into the model which allows the cost and impact of a mains replacement programme to be included in the model or not. As a default for all analysis carried out as part of this study, the costs and benefit of any mains replacement programme has been excluded. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 48 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 11.2 Maximum Achievable Levels of Non-Revenue Water The maximum practical achievable NRW by Volume for the entire ADM area of supply has been established as 21% - it will become prohibitively expensive and require a disproportionate amount of time, resources and budget to achieve any better target than this. Based on the predictive model that was prepared as part of this investigation, the cost of all interventions required to realise this target has been determined as approximately R27,6 million when discounted back to NPV. 11.3 Detailed Intervention Strategy 11.3.1 System Input Volume The following activities are recommended for specific interventions concerning the System Input Volumes: i) ii) iii) All bulk meters at outlets from reservoirs and inlets to supply zones need to be inspected for accuracy or whether they are in working order. In cases where they are missing, they should be installed All reservoir outlet meters (and reservoir levels) should be linked to a central control or remote server using GSM – based remote logging to enable daily, weekly, monthly and annual flow profiles/level profiles to be captured and interrogated for use in water balances. Any anomalies should be alarm-notified to the concerned operatives automatically. A replacement schedule to replace bulk and reservoir meters older than 5 years need to be initiated. 11.3.2 Billed Authorised Consumption The following activities are recommended for specific interventions concerning the Billed Authorised Consumption: i) ii) iii) iv) v) vi) vii) Installation of two-point controllers on all clusters of standpipes. The controllers will reduce pressure in the distribution lines to standpipes at times of minimal usage, and increase this pressure during times of high demand, on a daily basis. It is preferable to install Bermad Model 720 control valves rather than Bermad Model 710 valves (which initiates a complete system shut-down). The Model 720 ensures that the system remains charged at all times, minimising recharge pressure surges that increase leak risks. All existing connections need to be registered and bills forwarded regularly Conduct a pilot project on consumer meters that were installed during the early 80s (most common) to determine their accuracy levels Ensure billing other government departments/ municipality votes is conducted efficiently and that the meters are regularly read All data from new connections need to be registered Ensure that flow limiters are effective in limiting quotas allocated to individual consumers Investigate cases of replaced meters still existing in the billing database and clean the same by removal JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 49 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water viii) Investigate all consumers/properties that have zero consumption 11.3.3 Unbilled Authorised Consumption The following activities are recommended for specific interventions concerning the Unbilled Authorised Consumption: i) ii) iii) Installation of two-point controllers on all clusters of standpipes. The controllers will reduce pressure in the distribution lines to standpipes at times of minimal usage, and increase this pressure during times of high demand, on a daily basis. It is preferable to install Bermad Model 720 control valves rather than Bermad Model 710 valves (which initiates a complete system shut-down). The Model 720 ensures that the system remains charged at all times, minimising recharge pressure surges that increase leak risks. All municipal consumptions must be accurately metered and consumption assigned to the relevant votes All unmetered standpipes within the municipality must either be individually metered or clustered, the meters should be regularly read and bills posted to relevant Departments 11.3.4 Apparent Losses The following activities are recommended for specific interventions concerning the Apparent Losses: i) ii) iii) Investigate all properties that have not been registered/legally connected – these are probably illegally connected. If found, legalise connection, install meters and bill. Monitor zone meters frequently to pick illegal connection volumes Preparation of a schedule of replacing all faulty meters 11.3.5 Real Losses The following activities are recommended for specific interventions concerning the Real Losses: i) Active Leakage Detection • • • • • ii) 100% inspection and sounding of all water mains, reticulations and connections Metering of individual pressure zones and online monitoring of the same, with alarm levels preset Continuous and intermittent night flow analysis Identification of operation of the systems Temporary placement of leakage detection equipment and /or loggers Pressure Management • • JC200807H003 v1.0 Conducting extensive pressure logging, monitoring and zoning for the entire ADM Adoption of new design standards/pressure zones. In this regard, it is recommended that all existing and future supply zones be designed so as not to exceed 70m static pressure Page 50 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • Installation of intelligent PRVs and flow meters A PRV maintenance schedule be created and adhered to 11.4 Impact of Non-Revenue Water Reduction Intervention on Water Balance Components The Intervention strategies will have varied effects on the components of the water balances. In the following paragraphs the potential reductions in the Non-Revenue Water and System Input Volumes shall be presented, as will the potential gains in the Billed Authorised Consumptions. The detailed analyses per system/scheme have been attached in Annexure C hereto. 11.5.1 Real Losses Any intervention to decrease Real Losses of the entire Amajuba system will decrease the SIV as well. The current real losses for the entire Amajuba are 751 248 kl/year and the Unavoidable Annual Real Losses are 115 009 kl/year. The maximum potential for improvement is calculated as 636 239 kl/year. Through active pressure management together with the implementation of extensive continuous leak detection and repair exercises, and reduction of response times to pipe burst, it is possible to reduce the total real loss volume by 580 184 kl/year. This represents a 65,4% reduction in real losses and has a direct impact on the SIV where a corresponding decrease in volume would be expected. This loss reduction represents an annual saving of R 1 740 552 in bulk water production/purchase costs. The reduction in real loss volume equates to an overall reduction of 0.4m3/hr/km. 11.5.2 Apparent Losses The two components of Apparent Losses are Unauthorised Consumption and Meter Inaccuracies. Implementing a consumer meter installation and registration, in addition to identification of illegal connections throughout the district could reduce the volume by 83 139 kl/year. This represents an annual saving of R 249 417 in bulk water production. 11.5.3 Unbilled Authorised Consumption UAC consists of Unmetered Municipal Consumption and Unmetered Standpipes. Implementation of a metering procedure for all municipal consumption and public standpipes would transfer these volumes to the Billed Authorised Consumption part of the water balance, thus reducing the NRW by a similar volume. Implementing these interventions could reduce the UAC by 188 369 kl/year. This represents an annual saving of R 565 107 in bulk production costs, while transferring this volume to the revenue water section will result in an increase in revenue of R 1 318 583 (production costs inclusive). JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 51 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 11.5 Medium-Term Target Water Balance The individual medium-term water balances have been attached in Annexure C hereto. The combined medium-term water balance with 95% confidence levels is presented in Table 26, in comparison with the current entire Amajuba water balance, also with 95% levels grading. Component System Input Volume Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Water Losses Non-Revenue Water Inefficiency of water resource use (%) NRW by volume (%) Projected Medium Term Volumes: With Intervention Ml/year 95% CI 1,595 ±8.0% 1,256 ±10.0% 118 ±8.9% 49 ±10.0% 171 ±7.7% 220 ±6.4% 338 ±5.2% 11% 21% Current Water Balance Ml/year 1,970 780 306 133 751 884 1,190 95% CI ±5.0% ±5.0% ±9.4% ±49.7% ±7.3% ±9.7% ±7.6% % Reduction/ Increase 19.0% 61.0% 61.4% 63.2% 77.3% 75.1% 71.6% 38% 60% Table 26: Entire Amajuba District Intervention Medium-Term Water Balance (Compared to the current Water Balance) after Completion of the Recommended Intervention Strategies 11.6 Medium-Term Key Performance Indicators The medium-term key performance indicators after all strategies have been completed within all the different supply systems/schemes are expected to be as indicated in Table 27. System Target CARL (litres/conn/day w.s.p.) Target UARL (litres/conn/day w.s.p.) Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit 78.5 3.3 3.7 13.6 71.0 66.9 70.0 112.3 1.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 Entire ADM 34.6 46.6 0.7 Target ILI Table 27: Expected Medium Term Key Performance Indicators per System (after Completion of the Recommended Intervention Strategies) The combined medium-term Key Performance Indicators are summarised in Table 28 (in comparison to the current KPIs). All KPI calculations have been compiled and attached in Annexure C hereto. JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 52 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Key Performance Indicator Current KPI Value Projected KPI Value (with Intervention) 38% 11% 189.86 15.57 520.16 42.67 161.33 12.62 442.2 34.6 30.44 17.01 83.4 46.6 28.48 2.93 78.03 8.04 Infrastructure Leakage Index 5.3 0.7 Financial: Non Revenue water by Volume (%) 60% 21% Water Resources: Inefficiency of use of Water Resources (RL/SIV) % Operational: Water losses 3 (m /service connection/year) Water losses (litres/service connection/day) Current Annual Real Losses 3 (m /service connection/year) Current Annual Real Losses (litres/service connection/day) Unavoidable Annual Real Losses 3 (m /service connection/year) Unavoidable Annual Real Losses (litres/service connection/day) Apparent Losses 3 (m /service connection/year) Apparent Losses (litres/service connection/day) Table 28: Comparison of Key Performance Indicators, Current and after the Completion of Intervention Strategies 11.7 Benefits of Non-Revenue Water Reduction The comparison between the current water balance and the medium-term intervention based water balance can be summarised as follows: • • • • JC200807H003 v1.0 Reduction of System Input Volume by 23,5% Reduction of Non-Revenue Water by Volume by 351% Reduction in Unbilled Authorised Consumption by 305% Increase in Billed Authorised Consumption by 161%. Page 53 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 11.8 Critical Success/Enabling Factors In order to ensure the success of this NRW reduction programme and to meet the proposed targets contained in this Master Plan, there are a number of critical success factors. These were identified as being: • • • • • • • Recognition of NRW reduction as a major focus area of the Water Service Provider and Water Service Authority by all Client Departments, including and especially Operations Recognition of the need to have sufficient dedicated internal resources available to be focused on ensuring the implementation, sustaining, monitoring and evaluation of NRW reduction intervention Embracing the principles and objectives as Water Conservation/Water Demand Management Securing the requested funding of approximately R28 million over the next five financial years Implementing accepted best practice in all aspects of NRW reduction, including data/information management Not falling into the trap of treating the NRW reduction interventions proposed in this Master plan as a once-off capital investment – any intervention has to be sustained and the ongoing operations and maintenance must be budgeted for and carried out Focus must be on high impact interventions irrespective of any external (political) influence that could be brought to bear on the proposed roll-out strategy. 11.9 Targeted Non-Revenue Water Areas of Influence The model discussed earlier in Section 6 of this report refers. The grading in areas of influence as have been revised and the new targets have been presented in Table 29 and Figure 25. Service Delivery Aspect System Knowledge Operations Design Maintenance Customer Services Legal Finances/Budget Organisational Design & HR Impact 3 4 4 3 3 3 4 2 Field (Medium-Term) Influence Dependency 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 4 4 2 2 Table 29: Targeted Non-Revenue Water Area of Influence JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 54 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Amajuba District Municipality - Strategic NRW Master Plan Influence of NRW on Other Areas of Operation System Knowledge 5 4 Organisational Design & HR Operations 3 2 1 Finances/Budget Design 0 Legal Maintenance Customer Services Field (Baseline) Influence Field (Target +5 years) Influence Figure 25: Medium-Term Target Non-Revenue Water Area of Influence 11.10 Overall Economic Analysis The overall Cost:Benefit ratio for the intervention strategies proposed in the previous sub-sections is presented in Table 30 (mains replacement has not been included) JC200807H003 v1.0 Page 55 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water System Utrecht Dannhauser Durnacol Hattingspruit Entire AMAJUBA Annual Volume (Ml) Annual Cost based on Bulk Water Purchase Price (R) Capital Cost (R) Annual O&M Cost (R) System Input Volume Reduction Gross Revenue/ Billed Volume Gain Annual Benefit ( R ) Bulk Water Purchase Cost Reduction Gross Revenue/ Billed Volume Gain 849 605 415 101 R 5,943,000 R 4,235,000 R 2,905,000 R 707,000 R 3,226,123 R2,171,289 R 1,303,168 R 317,248 R 106,213 R 80,750 R 79,817 R 4,663 248 66 59 3 155 203 104 14 R 1,726,000 R 462,000 R 413,000 R 21,000 R 1,085,000 R 1,421,000 R 728,000 R 98,000 1.19 1.20 1.21 2.71 1,970 R 13,790,000 R 7,017,828 R 271,443 376 476 R 2,622,000 R 3,332,000 1.22 Table 30: Entire Amajuba District Intervention Cost-Benefit Analysis (Mains Replacement not Included) JC200807H003 v1.0 Cost Benefit Ratio Annual Benefit (Ml) Page 56 of 74 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 12. Non-Revenue Water Reduction Programme 12.1 Non-Revenue Water Reduction Intervention Work Plan This Master Plan covers a 5-year period, so it is envisaged that all the recommendations as proposed in this Master Plan would be implemented within this time frame. However, the roll-out of the NRW reduction programme is entirely dependent on the available budget. One of the constraints of preparing this Master Plan was the uncertainty of available budget to determine intervention activities. The interactive spreadsheet was therefore changed to allow flexibility in terms of identifying intervention activities depending on available budget. Once a fixed budget is known then the activities can be determined. It is not possible to complete this at this stage of the Master Plan, so a NRW Reduction Intervention Work Plan approach has therefore been recommended. A proposed template for this document has been included in Annexure E and it is recommended that the detailed programming and scheduling be included in this document once certainty is known about available budgets. 12.2 Priority Non-Revenue Water Reduction Interventions Apart from the uncertainty surrounding available budgets and the subsequent impact on programme, there are some clear interventions that will offer immediate benefit to ADM. In this regard, the rezoning of the entire ADM system, particularly in Utrecht and Dannhauser to zones that will ensure that the maximum static pressures in the reticulation network do not exceed 50m, is the single most important intervention that can be carried out. As was confirmed in the predictive model, any funding made available up to R1 000 000 should be dedicated to this intervention. 13. Funding Strategy 13.1 Funding Requirements The maximum practical achievable NRW by Volume for the entire ADM area of supply has been established as 21% - it will become prohibitively expensive and require a disproportionate amount of time, resources and budget to achieve any better target than this. Based on the predictive model that was prepared as part of this investigation, the cost of all interventions required to realise this target has been determined as approximately R27,6 million when discounted back to NPV. A cost:benefit curve, based on the predictive model, has been included in both the Master Plan and spreadsheet model to assist with the determination of the benefit of any NRW reduction programme based on budget/funding constraints. TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 57 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 13.2 In-House Resource Development The funding requirements mentioned in the previous section refer only to the “technical” costs required to achieve the objectives of this Master Plan and exclude the following costs which were deemed to be unquantifiable at this stage: a) b) c) Any organisational costs Any costs associated with the communication strategy mentioned later Any resource development costs With reference to the last item, it is imperative that any resource/official that forms part of the NRW Section be actively involved in a comprehensive and sustainable skills development programme. Ideally this should form part of the Workplace Skills Development Plan of ADM. The following activities are therefore recommended for adoption: • • • • Interactive visits and proactive engagement with other National WSA/WSP’s Interaction with international public sector water utilities Attendance at relevant training courses as and when held (eg through WISA or WRC) Development of a Standards and Procedures Manual that can serve both as a Quality Management System and induction training material It is recommended that for training sessions and material, and public sector interaction that an annual budget of R100 000 be put aside for skills development. 14. Resource Management Strategy 14.1 Option 1 – Current Funding Limitations It has been assumed that the budgets set aside for current NRW activities will be continued as Option 1 i.e. current funding limitations. This figure is currently in the order of R1 500 000. As was stated earlier in the Master plan, currently the management of any NRW activity is undertaken by two resources, both of whom are situated in the Directorate: Special Projects. It was deemed imperative that the profile of NRW be elevated to as senior a level as possible within the Client organisation and that, if possible, dedicated focus on NRW activities be allowed from this Directorate without distraction from other initiatives – this is a critical part of the success of the recommendations contained in this Master Plan. If the current levels of funding remain in effect and are not increased, it is proposed that a training and mentorship programme be adopted and implemented through the programme management phase of the roll-out of the NRW reduction interventions with the existing resources. However, ADM must be acutely aware of the fact that any NRW reduction intervention is not just a “once off” programme that can be left aside once the targets have been achieved. System attrition is a real problem and just as much effort must be focused on sustaining NRW levels as achieving them in the first place. In this regard, it is strongly recommended that ADM invest in TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 58 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water resources dedicated to the maintenance of key NRW system components (such as meters and pressure reducing valves) as well as to the monitoring and evaluation of NRW activities. The detailed breakdown of responsibility and activities for all resources, both public and private sector, need to be included in the Work Plan, the template for which has been included in Annexure E. 14.2 Option 2 – Additional Funding Availability The requirements for ADM NRW staff based on a larger available budget can only be determined once the budget is known. However, some guidelines for staff that would need to be resident inside ADM (excluding administrative support staff) to assist with the successful roll-out of a largescale NRW reduction programme, per water balance component, have been included in Table 31. Water Balance Component Billed Authorised Consumption and Apparent Loss Control Billed Authorised Consumption and Apparent Loss Control Real Loss Reduction Real Loss Reduction Real Loss Reduction Real Loss Reduction Real Loss Reduction System Input Volume Focus Area Monitoring Evaluation Level of Staff Required and Technician Number of Staff Required N/A Interaction with Admin Clerk Finance and Budgeting Capital improvements Maintenance Monitoring and Evaluation, including Reporting Active Leak Detection N/A Technician Artisan Technician Technician Assistants Field measurements Technician Bulk meter Artisan maintenance 1 1 plus 1 team for entire ADM N/A N/A Table 31: Guideline ADM NRW Human Resource Requirements for Full-Scale Rollout of NRW Reduction Programme The guidelines contained in Table 31 are only guidelines – it is assumed that a full work study would need to be completed prior to any such changes to the current organisational structure taking place. The guidelines do also not take into account that the roll-out programme may only have a duration of five years. 14.3 In-House Resource Development With reference to resource development, it is imperative that any resource/official that forms part of the NRW Section be actively involved in a comprehensive and sustainable skills development programme. Ideally this should form part of the Workplace Skills Development Plan of ADM. The following activities are therefore recommended for adoption: TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 59 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • • • • 15. Interactive visits and proactive engagement with other National WSA/WSP’s Interaction with international public sector water utilities Attendance at relevant training courses as and when held (eg through WISA or WRC) Development of a Standards and Procedures Manual that can serve both as a Quality Management System and induction training material Development of customised accreditation criteria, such as for leak detection, that allows for Client assurance in a quality product. Quality Assurance and Performance Management Quality Assurance plays an important role in the implementation of any NRW reduction programme and without a Quality Management System in place which is actively monitored by the Client, the desired impact on NRW levels may not be achieved. Quality assurance applies just as much to the Client organisation as it does to any external service provider. Quality Assurance plays an important part in the Work Plan, which serves as a detailed breakdown of activities, roles and responsibilities, although this can only be addressed with the required attention to detail once the actual work packages have been determined. However, as mentioned in the previous section, the development of a Standards and Procedures Manual would be an invaluable tool for both ADM NRW Staff, Operations staff and any external service provider. Furthermore, it is also recommended that an independent Water Auditor be appointed as part of the overall quality assurance framework to verify any reporting and results achieved through the NRW reduction programme. The introduction of a Quality Management System needs to be underpinned and supported by a Performance Management System. A performance management system is based on the following drivers/indicators, as presented in Figure 26: Key Result Areas (KRA’s): the ultimate objective or result of the programme. These may be technical (eg targeted level of NRW) or non-technical (eg verified, skilled personnel or fully implemented records system) Key Performance Measures (KPM’s): these are manipulations of KPI’s to present some measure of progress or performance Key Performance Indicators (KPI’s): these are factual numbers that represent an indicator selected as part of the programme TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 60 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water Figure 26: Example Components of a NRW Performance Management System 16. Monitoring and Evaluation 16.1 Monthly Reporting Requirements As part of the QMS mentioned in the previous section, a fairly rigid monthly reporting system will need to be implemented in order for progress to be recorded. The monthly reports will need to communicate progress to various roleplayers and will need to include the following items: • • • • • • • • Water balances for month and year-to-date Physical progress on NRW reduction activities Progress against targets Key Performance Indicators – actual and trend Budget and expenditure Identification of challenges Success stories Recommended changes to intervention strategy A proposed template for the monthly report has been included as Annexure F. TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 61 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water 16.2 Annual Reporting Requirements and Programme Review As will be discussed in the following sections, it is recommended that an independent Water Auditor be appointed as an external roleplayer, one of whose primary responsibilities will be the production of a quarterly/annual Water Audit Report. It is envisaged that the Water Audit Report will be more of an administrative or legislative requirement and will not get into a huge amount of technical detail. To supplement the Water Audit Report, it is envisaged that an Annual NRW report will be produced within the framework of this Master Plan and any Work Plan developed arising from this Master Plan. This report would serve both as a factual report of activities carried out within the financial year, provide figures necessary for the Water Audit Report and provide a review of the strategy and programme. 17. Risk Management The targets mentioned and recommended as part of this Master Plan are subject to a number of risks that may occur outside of the control of the Directorate: Special Projects. The targets stated as part of this Master Plan will only be achieved under ideal conditions and within an enabling framework as discussed earlier. Annexure G therefore contains a standard risk management schedule that identifies and evaluates any risk associated with the implementation of the recommended NRW reduction activities (likelihood/probability, consequence/impact and ranking), as well as includes a proposed risk mitigation strategy/measures with clearly identified responsibilities. 18. Communication Management Part of the successful implementation of a NRW reduction programme would be the implementation of a comprehensive communications strategy that is focused on the following roleplayers both inside and outside ADM: • • • • • • ADM – Area Managers and Operations staff ADM – senior management ADM – Exco and Councillors (including various standing committees) ADM – marketing and public relations Customers Water Service Authorities A Communications Plan has been included in Annexure H. 19. Conclusions and Recommendations The key conclusions and recommendations contained in this Master Plan are summarised as follows: • It is unrealistic for ADM to set a medium-term target of less than 21% by volume TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 62 of 62 Amajuba District Municipality – 5-Year Strategic Management Plan for Reduction of Non-Revenue Water • • • • • • • An economically optimal target is 21% NRW by volume within a budget of approximately R28 million (including any mains replacement) An annual operations budget of at least R500 000 per annum be set aside to ensure the sustainability of all pressure management intervention as well as targeted leak detection and repair activities The largest impact on NRW volumes is pressure management in Utecht. Any available budget up to R1 million should be used for this purpose New design standards must be formalised and implemented (new pressure regimes, pipe material, etc) All unmetered connections, including all currently unmetered standpipes, must be metered and registered as connections as a matter of urgency The internal profile of Non-Revenue Water reduction and the Directorate: Engineering Services must be raised to such a level as to demonstrate corporate and operational support and buy-in. Without this, the success and impact of the entire programme may be compromised The recommendations as contained in this Master Plan for the roll-out of the NRW reduction interventions be approved for implementation TA200704H001 v1.0 Page 63 of 62