The Press

Scheme to monitor household water use

- JACK FLETCHER

A scheme to monitor residentia­l water use in Christchur­ch has won an innovation incubator event and could be awarded local government funding.

The Future City Activator ran over the weekend, a tech hackathon focused on tackling the city’s most pressing social and environmen­tal challenges.

Eight teams gathered at the Epic Innovation Campus from Friday till Sunday, hosted by Ministry of Awesome (MoA) and backed by Christchur­ch City Council (CCC) and Canterbury Tech.

WaiWatch, a team focused on accurately measuring household water use, took out the top spot. They are now seeking funding through the Christchur­ch City Council’s (CCC) Innovation and Sustainabi­lity Fund.

Currently, the council has no accurate way to measure water use per household, a problem team leader Amar Verma said could be solved using already-existing technology.

‘‘We wanted to provide the council with a tool for reliable and continuous data which is available to them from the source, and that they can depend on,’’ Verma said.

Verma said his team, WaiWatch, was made up of IT profession­als, teachers and a rocket science graduate.

WaiWatch was asking for $50,000 to trial smart sensors on 100 houses across the city to ‘‘identify patterns and trends, summarise the findings and present a report to council for further action’’.

‘‘It will provide them a tool to assess their strategies and their thinking about water, and even their forecastin­g over time.

‘‘Also for residents, they will be able to see for themselves how much water they are using and force them to think about it.’’

Verma said the scheme could identify ‘‘water abusers’’ who were using more water than, say, the average for their suburb.

‘‘Behaviours do change, but they need some motivation, so this should lead to a long-term positive behavioura­l change,’’ he said.

Marian Johnson, MoA chief awesome officer, said the goal of the hackathon was ‘‘to find fantastic solutions that can impact behaviours’’.

‘‘The Ministry of Awesome is the hub of the start up, entreprene­urial and innovation ecosystem in Christchur­ch, and we want to do everything we can do support start ups [like WaiWatch],’’ Johnson said.

CCC’s principal advisor on sustainabi­lity Tony Moore said WaiWatch could take water monitoring in the city into the 21st century.

‘‘WaiWatch delivers an innovative, yet simple idea that has the potential to benefit every household and business in the region,’’ Moore said.

‘‘Christchur­ch and Canterbury needs to watch its water. It is vital that we can accurately measure [and manage] … this precious resource for the future.’’

"It will provide a tool to assess their strategies and thinking about water ...''

Amar Verma

 ??  ?? A scheme to monitor household water use in Christchur­ch has won an innovation incubator competitio­n.
A scheme to monitor household water use in Christchur­ch has won an innovation incubator competitio­n.

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