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City wants Vancouver brewers to make more with less

Commercial water use spikes 10 per cent in wake of tourism uptick and craft beer boom

A good year for tourism coupled with Vancouver’s craft brewery boom added up to a 10 per cent increase in the amount of water Vancouver businesses glugged in 2014. Meanwhile, residential water use stayed flat between 2013 and 2014.

The City of Vancouver now wants businesses to slow the flow.

“A lot of the water conservation focus over the years has been on residents, and now we’re broadening our reach,” said Brian Crowe, the city’s director of water, sewers and district energy.

As part of its Greenest City plan, the city wants to reduce overall water consumption by 33 per cent of 2006 levels. That will save taxpayer money in the long run, Crowe said.

In 20 to 30 years, population growth is expected to put pressure on the region’s reservoirs. Expanding them will be costly.

“That could be raising the dam and flooding the watershed or developing another lake and damming another river,” said city waterworks engineer Danny Wong.

“That’s at a huge cost to the taxpayer. It’s well into the hundreds of millions if not a billion dollars, depending on what option you look at.”

Brewers say they’re on board to work with the city, but they also hope city staff are aligned with Metro Vancouver as the regional district introduces new rules for brewery waste water.

Metro Vancouver is expected to introduce a brewery and distiller-specific bylaw in 2016 to require brewers to monitor waste water and remove solids before they go down the drain.

Metro Vancouver is proposing charging breweries an administration fee of $200 plus an additional levy based on the amount of solids in waste water: the more solids, the higher the fee.

But Ken Beattie, executive director of the B.C. Craft Brewers Guild, said the two policies could be at cross-purposes if the city and regional district aren’t working together. “One of the ways you make sure things don’t get flushed down into the sewer system is to use more water, but the city is saying, ‘Wait, don’t use more water,’” Beattie said. “So we’ve said, ‘You guys have to get together and tell us what you want.’”

This story first appeared in our sister publication Business in Vancouver. Click here to read more.

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