| > Install a rain butt to collect rainwater to use in the garden. This assumes water is inconsistent. Once the rain butt is full, there's no more benefit. And then in a long dry season once it's emptied, it's not saving any more. > Fix a leaking toilet – leaky loos can waste 200-400 litres a day. If you're on a water meter you're already incentivised to fix this - so a better answer is water meters. > Use water from the kitchen to water your plants. Assuming you're using waste water, which most people won't. > Avoid watering your lawn – brown grass will grow back healthy. Households with lawns are rarer than they used to be - a big red flag has always been that hosepipe bans never applies to golf courses which use a large amount of water to keep their grass green all year. > Turn off the taps when brushing teeth or shaving. A few minutes of water p/person per day. > Take shorter showers. Probably minimal and potentially a hygiene problem. > Delete old emails and pictures as data centres require vast amounts of water to cool their systems. Negligible at best. |
If you're irrigating your garden, that's also going to be a big one, but quite often you get a hosepipe ban in the dry season anyway.
Someone with a water meter should try these measures and see if they notice a difference; I bet they don't. The data center one is of course unmeasureable by the individual.