July 26, 2024
Report

Water & Energy Interdependencies Across Economic Sectors of the United States

Abstract

The motivation of the Integrated Water Power Resilience Project is to identify and develop opportunities for improving resilience in the water and power sectors through coordinated planning, investment, and operations and thereby provide benefits to power and water utilities, consumers, and the environment. Water and power systems are interdependent, subject to many of the same natural and manmade hazards, and are critical for the well-being of communities and society. Because of the interconnectedness of water and power systems, there are substantial economic, social, and environmental benefits to co-managing the market sectors for resilience instead of managing them separately. To support this initiative and future research in this area, a county level water and energy flow dataset was developed to build, calculate, and visualize interconnections in water and energy between various sectors. This report presents county and regional water and energy visualizations across nine economic sectors of the United States: agriculture, commercial, electricity generation, industrial, mining, public water supply, residential, transportation, and wastewater treatment.

Published: July 26, 2024

Citation

Mongird K., J.S. Homer, J.S. Rice, and K. Oikonomou. 2024. Water & Energy Interdependencies Across Economic Sectors of the United States Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.