Abstract

Water conservation is essential to sustainable development, and among human activities, buildings are responsible for a significant portion of total water consumption. Therefore, we present a systematic review that aims to search for valuable contributions from benchmarking and their potential significance to water conservation. The relevance of performing such a review is to support the research in the field, organise information, and highlight both the lack of data and valuable results in specific building types. Benchmarking highlights best performance buildings, while it also classifies performances, which allows developing interventions for different buildings. Seventy-two documents on the environmental performance of buildings were reviewed, and a variety of methods, metering procedures, and indicators were found as valuable data for water-saving initiatives. In addition to a systematic search in SCOPUS, searches were made in Science Direct and Google Scholar databases. Although the main challenge in this matter lies in the lack of procedures standardisation, it was found that performing benchmarking is relevant for accurately developing water conservation initiatives. Gains of over five million m3 per year in a set of buildings or above 151 thousand m3 per year in a single factory were found, which indicate the existing potential for water conservation.

Highlights

  • Friendly buildings are essential for sustainable development and require standardisation

  • Studies on water consumption in agricultural sciences presenting terms such as agriculture, crops, or plants were excluded, as this review focus on water benchmarking in buildings

  • The search in SCOPUS alone resulted in 44 documents on benchmarking methods

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Friendly buildings are essential for sustainable development and require standardisation. There are building rating systems, such as LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), BREEAM (BRE Environment Assessment Method), and Green Star, which mainly focus on energy efficiency. The concern over minimum water supply levels remains, water efficiency is more and more considered in sustainable building assessment. Due to their high heterogeneity, benchmarking systems could be used to evaluate buildings efficiency, which could be implicated in improving overall resources conservation, such as water and energy. Benchmarking is a methodology that can be used for comparing similar processes of a given activity to highlight the one with the best performance [1], which can be used to assess the management of organisations. Benchmarking differs from a benchmark, as the first one is a process for comparison, and the other is a reference value of the ideal situation obtained from such a process [3,4]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call