| Literature DB >> 34202018 |
Tamaryn Menneer1,2, Zening Qi3, Timothy Taylor1, Cheryl Paterson1, Gengyang Tu1, Lewis R Elliott1, Karyn Morrissey1, Markus Mueller2,4.
Abstract
In response to the COVID-19 outbreak, the UK Government provided public health advice to stay at home from 16 March 2020, followed by instruction to stay at home (full lockdown) from 24 March 2020. We use data with high temporal resolution from utility sensors installed in 280 homes across social housing in Cornwall, UK, to test for changes in domestic electricity, gas and water usage in response to government guidance. Gas usage increased by 20% following advice to stay at home, the week before full lockdown, although no difference was seen during full lockdown itself. During full lockdown, morning electricity usage shifted to later in the day, decreasing at 6 a.m. and increasing at midday. These changes in energy were echoed in water usage, with a 17% increase and a one-hour delay in peak morning usage. Changes were consistent with people getting up later, spending more time at home and washing more during full lockdown. Evidence for these changes was also observed in later lockdowns, but not between lockdowns. Our findings suggest more compliance with an enforced stay-at-home message than with advice. We discuss implications for socioeconomically disadvantaged households given the indication of inability to achieve increased energy needs during the pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; electricity usage; gas usage; sensors; water usage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34202018 PMCID: PMC8297134 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18136818
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Factors that can affect domestic utility usage, and the covariate measure created from the survey, sensor or housing data.
| Factor Affecting Utility Usage and Supporting Literature | Survey Question or Source of Data | Survey Response Options (All Questions Also Had the Option to Not Answer) | Measure(s) Created | Missing Data |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The number of the people in the household [ | Please tell us the number of people in your household. | Numbers of males and females in the following age ranges: 0–12, 13–17, 18–65, 65+ years. | The total number of people living in the home. | No missing responses. |
| The UK lockdown would have particularly affected people under the age of 18 and those in employment due to closures of schools and places of work, thereby increasing the time spent at home. In particular, children and adolescents in the home can affect utility usage [ | Please tell us the number of people in your household. | Numbers of males and females in the following age ranges: 0–12, 13–17, 18–65, 65+ years. | Set to 1 if the response for 0–12 or for 13–17 is greater than zero. | No missing responses for number of children and adolescents. |
| Last week, were you: (Include any paid work, including casual or temporary work, even if only for one hour.) | Working as an employee? Self-employed or freelance? Working paid or unpaid for your own or your families business? Away from work ill, on maternity leave, on holiday or temporarily laid off? Doing any other kind of paid work? On a government sponsored training scheme? Waiting to start a job you have already obtained? Actively looking for work? Retired (whether receiving a pension or not)? A student? Looking after home or family? Long-term sick or disabled? None of the above? | Employment was 1 if ‘working as an employee’, and 0 for all other non-missing responses. | ||
| Time normally spent inside the home (see | On average, about how many hours per day do you spend indoors at home during an average weekend day (including sleeping)? Question repeated for week day, and for your partner. | 0 to 24 | Mean time spent indoors, across the main respondent and his/her partner, and across week day and weekend day, weighted to give the average time spent at home each day. | Cases with missing responses were excluded from the analyses. |
| Electrical appliances [ | Which of these pieces of technology do you have in your home and are they connected to the internet? (Select all that apply.) | Internet connection, Television, TV decoder (e.g., Sky, Virgin Media), Mobile phone, Computer, Tablet, Wearable technology (e.g., Fitbit), Smart watch, Other technology. | A measure of the electrical devices in the home. Count of the number of technology devices in the home, including those connected to the internet. | The survey question comprised a list with options to select, so missing responses were treated as a ‘No’ response. |
| Smart meters [ | Does your home have smart meters for your energy/water supply? | No, Electricity, Gas, Water. | Whether or not the home has a smart meter for the relevant utility. | No missing responses. |
| The number of rooms in the home or floor area [ | Please tick all the rooms that you have in your home. | Kitchen, Dining room, Utility room, Bathroom, Living room, Bedrooms 1 to 4, Other room. | Count of the number of rooms in the home. | No missing responses, except for ‘Other’, which was counted if it contained any text. |
| The building type [ | Flat or house (including bungalow) obtained from Coastline Housing records. | Property type (flat or house). | No missing information. | |
| Fuel poverty [ | Do you think your home is adequately heated? | Yes/No | Combined to provide an indicator of fuel poverty. A score of 1 was assigned to ‘No’, ‘Yes’ and ‘Yes’, respectively, and summed to provide a score of 0 to 3. The fuel poverty measure was based on the definition “the state of being unable to afford to heat one’s home adequately” [ | Cases were excluded from the analyses if any response was missing. |
| Do you avoid turning on the heating because of cost? | Yes/No | |||
| Do you avoid ventilating your home to save heat/energy? | Yes/No | |||
| In addition to the fuel poverty measure constructed from the survey data, mean indoor temperature [ | Temperature data from Smartline living room and bedroom sensors. | The mean temperature over both rooms. Calculated from the mean of hourly values across the lockdown time period in both years to provide one value per home. | If sensor data was not present for both years, the case was excluded from the analyses. | |
| IMD rank using the postcode for the home. | 606 to 19,024, with a lower rank indicating higher deprivation. |
Figure 1Mean hourly usage per day over all homes from February to April in 2019 and 2020 for electricity (upper left), gas (upper right) and water (lower panel).
Figure 2Electricity (upper panels), gas (middle) and water (lower) usage during the advice (left) and instruction (right) periods. Error bands represent 0.5 standard errors. The scale on the vertical axis applies to both panels of the same measure.
Figure 3The change in electricity usage from 2019 to 2020 for households split into binary categories according to the values of the covariates. The group represented by the red line was considered more likely to be affected in terms of electricity usage by lockdown. Error bands represent 0.5 standard errors. See also Table S8 in the Supplementary Material.
Figure 4Electricity (upper panels), gas (middle) and water (lower) usage during the second lockdown (left), third lockdown (middle) and between lockdowns (right). Error bands represent 0.5 standard errors. The scale on the vertical axis applies to all panels of the same measure.
Figure 5Red and blue lines show the indoor temperature in the living room (upper panels) and bedroom (lower panels) during the advice (left) and instruction (right) periods in 2019 and 2020. Grey lines show the external temperature during the same periods. Error bands represent 0.5 standard errors, and the number of homes included for indoor temperature was 162 to 170. The scales on the vertical axes apply to both left and right panels.