Author Topic: California will soon have toughest shower head requirements in nation  (Read 986 times)

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rangerrebew

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California will soon have toughest shower head requirements in nation




New limits on shower heads
 

The California Energy Commission on Wednesday approved stricter limits on shower heads and bathroom faucets.
 (Anne Cusack / Los Angeles Times)

By Kurt Chirbas and Taylor Goldenstein
 
August 12, 2015, 1:12 PM |Reporting from Sacramento

 

After a full turnover of shower head and faucet stocks by 2029, the regulations are expected to save 38 billion gallons of water, 20.2 billion cubic feet of natural gas and 1,322 gigawatt hours of electricity each year, according to the commission.

Also effective next July, residential bathroom faucets will have a maximum flow rate of 1.2 gallons per minute, down from 2.2 gallons per minute. The standards will save about 154 billion gallons of water in the next 10 years, the commission estimates.

“I just want to point out this is pretty huge,” Commissioner Andrew McAllister said at Wednesday’s commission meeting in Sacramento.

 Faucets and shower heads currently count for about a third of all indoor residential water use, said Kristen Driskell, supervisor of the appliances program at the Energy Commission.
 
Thirty-one percent of showerhead models on the market currently meet the upcoming 2.0-gallon standard, which is known as Tier 1, Driskell said.
 
The 2.0-gallon limit for showerheads was adopted by the city of Los Angeles in 2009. New York City adopted the same standard in 2010.
 

California, struggling through the fourth year of a historic drought, will be the first to adopt the standard at a state level.
 
In April, Gov. Jerry Brown issued an executive order directing the state’s Energy Commission to adopt emergency regulations that would establish improved efficiency standards for water appliances such as shower heads and faucets.
 
Last month, the commission held a workshop to vet proposed amendments to improve the efficiency of the appliances.
 
“We are grateful for the energy savings and the water savings that will happen as a result of these thoughtful standards,” Mary Anderson, a representative of Pacific Gas and Electric Co., said Wednesday.

Representatives of the plumbing supply industry also spoke in support of new limits.

Separately, state water officials announced the launch of a $24-million turf replacement rebate program that in part targets low-income communities.
 
 
The program will be overseen by the California Department of Water Resources and will offer residents of single-family homes $2 per square foot of lawn replaced for up to 1,000 square feet, the agency said in a news release.

Half of the program’s funds will be earmarked until Oct. 1 for disadvantaged communities, in which the annual median household income is less than 80% of the state’s median household income, officials said.

After Oct. 1, the funds will be open to all residents, regardless of income.

The department will also fund a $6-million toilet rebate program for $100 rebates per household for the installation of high-efficiency toilets in place of older toilets.

The programs are being funded by the Proposition 1 water bond passed by voters in 2014.
 
The announcement comes about a month after the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California’s highly popular rebate program exhausted its budget after spending $340 million and replacing 170 million square feet of turf.

That program also offered residents $2 per square foot and was initially unlimited until the district’s board set limits, such as a $6,000 cap on residential rebates, in late May.

Residents who previously received rebates in 2014 or 2015 through other government agencies will only be eligible if the previous rebate was for less than $2 per square foot.

If a local water supplier is already offering a rebate of less than $2 per square foot, the state will supplement the remainder up to $2.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-shower-heads-20150812-story.html
« Last Edit: August 14, 2015, 08:50:29 am by rangerrebew »

Offline rb224315

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These people are such idiots.  If water is a scarce resource (and it is most definitely scarce in CA right now), then change the pricing structure.  It should cost $x per gallon up to the amount required to support self and family.  If self and family want to water the lawn or have a pool, it's $x + $y per gallon above the amount required to sustain life & wash armpits.

What will people do in response to shower head requirements?  They'll buy a low-flow shower head & drill it out.  I've seen it done.  ;-)
rb224315:  just another "Creepy-ass Cracka".

Online Bigun

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California will soon have toughest shower head requirements in nation

And the most ignored!
"I wish it need not have happened in my time," said Frodo.

"So do I," said Gandalf, "and so do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us."
- J. R. R. Tolkien

Offline massadvj

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If I was still in my native California I think I'd just hire an illegal immigrant to stand in my shower and spit on me.  I will definitely get wetter than I would with these new shower heads and I'd be eliminating the middle man.

Offline Scottftlc

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These people are such idiots.  If water is a scarce resource (and it is most definitely scarce in CA right now), then change the pricing structure.  It should cost $x per gallon up to the amount required to support self and family.  If self and family want to water the lawn or have a pool, it's $x + $y per gallon above the amount required to sustain life & wash armpits.

What will people do in response to shower head requirements?  They'll buy a low-flow shower head & drill it out.  I've seen it done.  ;-)

That is called tiered pricing - we have it here in Las Vegas, Arizona does as well...as do many parts of California (not everywhere as they have a mish-mash of a multitude of local water providers, each with their own systems). The biggest issues in California (like everywhere in the west) is not municipal use, it is agriculture. More than 80 percent of the water used in the west is for growing cash crops...watermelons, alfalfa to ship to Japan to grow Kobe beef, almond trees, avocados, tomatoes...you name it, it is grown here.  And agriculture is a thirsty, heavy water use business - it is also the tradition of the west, it's how and why we were settled in the first place.  And agriculture is notorious for being lousy - the worst - at conservation.  We flood irrigate rice, vegetables and alfalfa in the driest deserts of North America.

Tiered pricing in cities is already here...it is what is done with the powerful and lucrative agricultural sector...which also employs all those millions and millions of illegals from the south...that will determine how well California weathers this very long-term problem.
« Last Edit: August 14, 2015, 03:17:58 pm by Scottftlc »
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