SD Facing Challenge of Doing More with Less Water

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Speeding up your shower by two minutes can save about five gallons of water each day. Piping leftover shower water to your lawn can conserve 25 gallons per day — or more than 9,100 gallons in a year.

Those are two examples of how some San Diegans have reduced their water binge in recent years. They’ve also made improvements such as buying low-flush toilets, water-sipping dishwashers and water-efficient clothes washers.

Between 2007 and 2013, the region’s residents, businesses and other institutions cut per-capita water use by 27 percent — from 211 gallons per day to 153. Now we’re being asked to dry out some more.

But is it possible to wring more savings?

Consider this: Between 1998 and 2002, the average American used 152 gallons of water per day, according to a 2006 United Nations report. The per-capita figure in Australia, the driest continent on Earth, was 130 gallons in that same time period. Most Europeans used 50 to 80 gallons per day, while many Africans subsisted on less than 13 gallons each day.

While parts of the developing world don’t have enough clean drinking water, experts said Americans and residents in other industrialized nations tend to waste potable water in lots of ways. Curtailing this waste would require being more mindful of consumption patterns and adopting greater reuse of wastewater, they said.

A good place to start might be the outdoors: More than half the water used in San Diego County goes to irrigate lawns and gardens, according to local water officials.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/feb/24/tp-san-diegans-facing-challenge-of-doing-more/

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Business Demand for Green Consultants is Growing

The effort among businesses to go green grows stronger every year, and with good reason. Green practices not only save businesses money, they also keep them competitive as more and more consumers make buying decisions based on a company’s carbon footprint.

A 2013 study by Massachusetts Institute of Technology showed that sustainability is now a permanent part of 70 percent of corporate agendas. Additionally, the Conscious Consumer Report: Redefining Value in a New Economy, a study by Branding and Integrated Marketing, a New York-based marketing research firm, found about 70 percent of respondents “avoid purchasing from companies whose practices they disagree with.”

Thorough inspection

In an effort to go green, many companies are hiring or contracting with “green” consultants. Not only do these consultants help businesses comply with environmental regulations, they can also help businesses save money by reducing internal waste and utility costs.

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If every commercial and industrial building nationwide improved energy efficiency by 10 percent, Americans would save about $20 billion on energy costs each year and prevent greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 30 million cars off the road, according to the Port of San Diego Green Business Network, an integrated energy efficiency and sustainability effort spearheaded by the Port of San Diego and San Diego Gas & Electric.

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/feb/24/tp-business-demand-for-green-consultants-is/

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Uncertainty in Housing Market

Prices are up in the residential market, but affordability a concern.

Housing, which zoomed up 18.4 percent in price last year, faces “uncertain” prospects this year, according to Tim Sullivan, newly named local chairman of the Urban Land Institute.

Sullivan, a real estate industry consultant, said last year’s housing market was one of “exuberance.”

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“Now I’d characterize the 2014 outlook as one of optimism but still with a level of uncertainty,” Sullivan said, “because we had such a nutty 2012 and ’13 with home prices moving up quickly and a little bit of land selling — maybe a three-year period of exuberance jammed into one. The market is now reeling again and there’s concern and uncertainty.”

His outlook, offered during an interview with U-T San Diego on Monday, was brightened somewhat by the firming up of occupancy rates for retail, office and industrial space and rental rates rising enough to justify some new construction, particularly for build-to-suit projects.

“From a residential side, it’s very solid — prices are up — but now we have a concern, after a year of affordability,” he said. “We can’t win for losing, and we can’t lose for winning.”

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/feb/26/tp-uncertainty-in-housing-market/

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