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Utah State University Water Main Break
Report: An Asset Management Tool for Utilities

Below
excerpts from the press release issued by Utah State University (USU) regarding
their 2023 water main break report study. The report is of interest to water
utility professionals as well as local lawmakers and enables utilities to
benchmark pipe material performance.
Study Says Lack of Funding for
Critical Water Mains is $452 Billion
Over 800 utilities were surveyed and
almost 400,000 miles of pipe data were analyzed, representing 17% of the
estimated 2.3 million miles of water mains in the US and Canada. USU published
similar studies in 2012 and 2018. The 2023 report references the previous
studies to analyze changes over time.
According to primary researcher, Professor Steven L.
Barfuss, P.E., one of the most important indicators for
identifying failing pipelines is water main break
rates. "Utilities
can
use this report to assist with asset management and
facilitate water infrastructure planning and pipe
replacement decision-making. The
goals are to control operating costs, reduce
service level impacts, and minimize health risks to customers," says Professor Barfuss.
"Notably, the report shows that 20% or 452,000 miles
of water pipes in the US and Canada are beyond their useful lives and need to be
replaced but have not been due to lack of funds. This represents a $452 billion
shortfall. In 2012, utilities reported that only 8% of installed water mains
were beyond their useful lives, so this is a growing problem," Professor Barfuss
adds.
Major
Findings and Benchmarks:
-
The US and Canada experience 260,000 water
main breaks annually, representing $2.6 billion in annual repair costs.
- Utilities reported the average failure age of
water pipe is 53 years. Notably, 33% of water mains are over 50 years old,
representing 770,000 miles of piping.
- In 2018, cast iron and asbestos cement
together represented 41% of all installed water mains. In 2023, the combined
length for these materials is 33%, a reduction of almost 8%. PVC pipe length
increased by 7% and ductile iron remained
approximately
the same.
- Material usage varies significantly across
geographic regions, suggesting that selection of pipe materials is often based
on preference.
- A total of 86% of cast iron pipe is over 50
years old and 41% of asbestos-cement pipe is more than 50 years old.
- The estimated average water loss to leakage is
11%.
- Overall failure rates decreased by 20% since
2018, which seems to correlate with reduced inventory of cast iron and
asbestos cement pipe, both of which have the highest break rates.
- A reconfirmed major finding is that polyvinyl
chloride (PVC) pipe has the lowest break rate when compared to cast iron,
ductile iron, steel, and asbestos cement pipes.
- Almost 86% of water pipes in the US and Canada
are less than 12 inches in diameter.
-
Smaller
pipes (12-inch in diameter and less) fail five times more than larger pipes
(14-inch and larger).
- A total of 75% of utilities reported corrosive
soil conditions, demonstrating the importance of corrosion mitigation for
water pipelines.
- Ductile iron pipe has over six times more
failures in highly corrosive soils compared to low corrosive soils.
- The percentage of utilities approving ductile
iron has decreased by 8% from 86% in 2018 to 78% in 2023. Steel pipe has shown
a 6% increase in acceptance from 38% to 44%.
- Almost 44% of utilities conduct some form of
regular condition assessment of water mains.
To view the full report, including the full set of
key findings and its methodology,
click here.

Steven L. Barfuss, P.E., is a
Research Professor at USU in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department
and an Associate Director at the Utah Water Research Laboratory (UWRL), a
world-renowned water research facility. Professor Barfuss has over 37 years of
research experience at UWRL and has published numerous peer-reviewed articles in
national and international journals. He also has considerable experience in the
hydraulics of pipelines and pipe failures.
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Regards,
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Bruce Hollands
President & CEO | Uni-Bell PVC Pipe
Association
201 E. John Carpenter Freeway, Suite 750 |
Irving, TX 75062
T. 972.243.3902 ext. 1019 | F. 972.243.3907
www.uni-bell.org
 
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