In 2015, all member states of the United Nations agreed on a shared roadmap for a more sustainable future: the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Seventeen goals, supported by targets and indicators, designed to turn global ambition into measurable action by 2030.
Among them, SDG 6: Clean Water and Sanitation is fundamental. Water underpins public health, economic activity, and resilient cities. Yet SDG 6 is also one of the goals where progress is most alarmingly off track. One reason is simple: water is still poorly managed where it matters most. In everyday operations.
This is where Indicator 6.4.1: Water-use efficiency becomes critical.
Water-use efficiency measures how much value is created per unit of water withdrawn. On a global level, it helps policymakers understand whether societies are using water responsibly. On a local level, it asks a far more practical question:
Are we using water where it creates value or are we losing it without noticing?
In buildings, inefficiency rarely announces itself. It does not arrive as a dramatic failure, but as a slow, continuous loss. Small leaks run day and night. Abnormal consumption blends into monthly averages. Manual meter readings arrive weeks or months too late. By the time someone reacts, thousands of cubic metres and significant costs may already be gone.
Real estate plays a decisive role in water-use efficiency. Buildings account for a large share of urban water consumption, yet they are often managed with limited visibility. Unlike energy, water has historically been cheap, abundant, and largely invisible.
That is no longer the case.
As water scarcity increases, infrastructure ages, and costs rise, inefficiency in buildings becomes a systemic risk and not just an environmental issue. Improving water-use efficiency at building level is one of the fastest ways to reduce waste, lower costs, and relieve pressure on local water resources, without waiting for new infrastructure or regulation.
But efficiency cannot be improved without insight.
At Smartvatten, we see water-use efficiency not as an abstract sustainability metric, but as something that must be managed operationally.
Continuous water monitoring changes the equation. When consumption is measured in real time:
Deviations are detected as they happen
Leaks are identified before they become damage
Consumption patterns become understandable
Inefficiency becomes visible — and solvable
This is when Indicator 6.4.1 stops being a line in a UN framework and starts functioning as a practical KPI for property owners and managers.
Our data consistently shows that the largest water losses are often the ones no one notices. Efficiency does not fail because organisations do not care — it fails because they do not see what is happening in time to act.
Water-use efficiency is sometimes misunderstood as a call to reduce consumption at any cost. In reality, it is about ensuring that water is used where it creates value and eliminated where it does not.
For real estate, this means fewer hidden leaks, fewer emergency repairs, lower operational risk, and better cost control. It also means being able to demonstrate concrete sustainability performance. Not as estimates, but as measured outcomes.
Efficiency benefits both the environment and the bottom line. When water losses are reduced, everyone gains.
Among all indicators under SDG 6, water-use efficiency is the most immediately actionable for the built environment. It can be influenced directly, measured continuously, and improved quickly. Most importantly, it turns global sustainability goals into local responsibility.
The SDGs make one thing clear: progress is not achieved through intentions alone. It is achieved through decisions, supported by data, and followed by action.
Water-use efficiency is not the final goal of SDG 6. But it is where meaningful, scalable change can begin, building by building, cubic metre by cubic metre.
At Smartvatten, that is where we believe sustainable water management starts.
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