An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use

Households consume a significant fraction of total potable water production. Strategies to improve the efficiency of water use tend to emphasize technological interventions to reduce or shift water demand. Behavioral water use reduction strategies can also play an important role, but a flexible fram...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clinton J. Andrews, Lilli Linkola, Thorsten Schuetze
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-07-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/3/1082
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spelling doaj-4d363714a48d452aa3a75c68fef202d12020-11-24T21:20:05ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412013-07-01531082110010.3390/w5031082An Agent Based Model of Household Water UseClinton J. AndrewsLilli LinkolaThorsten SchuetzeHouseholds consume a significant fraction of total potable water production. Strategies to improve the efficiency of water use tend to emphasize technological interventions to reduce or shift water demand. Behavioral water use reduction strategies can also play an important role, but a flexible framework for exploring the “what-ifs” has not been available. This paper introduces such a framework, presenting an agent-based model of household water-consuming behavior. The model simulates hourly water-using activities of household members within a rich technological and behavioral context, calibrated with appropriate data. Illustrative experiments compare the resulting water usage of U.S. and Dutch households and their associated water-using technologies, different household types (singles, families with children, and retired couples), different water metering regimes, and educational campaigns. All else equal, Dutch and metered households use less water. Retired households use more water because they are more often at home. Water-saving educational campaigns are effective for the part of the population that is receptive. Important interactions among these factors, both technological and behavioral, highlight the value of this framework for integrated analysis of the human-technology-water system.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/3/1082agent based modelingbehavioral factorsresidential water usebuildings
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clinton J. Andrews
Lilli Linkola
Thorsten Schuetze
spellingShingle Clinton J. Andrews
Lilli Linkola
Thorsten Schuetze
An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
Water
agent based modeling
behavioral factors
residential water use
buildings
author_facet Clinton J. Andrews
Lilli Linkola
Thorsten Schuetze
author_sort Clinton J. Andrews
title An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
title_short An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
title_full An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
title_fullStr An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
title_full_unstemmed An Agent Based Model of Household Water Use
title_sort agent based model of household water use
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Households consume a significant fraction of total potable water production. Strategies to improve the efficiency of water use tend to emphasize technological interventions to reduce or shift water demand. Behavioral water use reduction strategies can also play an important role, but a flexible framework for exploring the “what-ifs” has not been available. This paper introduces such a framework, presenting an agent-based model of household water-consuming behavior. The model simulates hourly water-using activities of household members within a rich technological and behavioral context, calibrated with appropriate data. Illustrative experiments compare the resulting water usage of U.S. and Dutch households and their associated water-using technologies, different household types (singles, families with children, and retired couples), different water metering regimes, and educational campaigns. All else equal, Dutch and metered households use less water. Retired households use more water because they are more often at home. Water-saving educational campaigns are effective for the part of the population that is receptive. Important interactions among these factors, both technological and behavioral, highlight the value of this framework for integrated analysis of the human-technology-water system.
topic agent based modeling
behavioral factors
residential water use
buildings
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/5/3/1082
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