My three takeaways from SWAN 2017

Bluefield Research recently attended the 7th annual SWAN conference in London and it was an exciting two days. Well over 200 attendees took part in the conference and a diverse mix of utilities, vendors, and investors provided engaging content throughout the sessions. It was a great opportunity to meet new colleagues, gather updates on technologies and trends, and… Continue reading My three takeaways from SWAN 2017

Convergence of Water and Data Drives $20B U.S. Smart Water Forecast

The U.S. municipal water sector, which has traditionally been slow to adopt new technologies, sits at the cusp of change, with over $20 billion of forecasted spending over the next decade. As a result, companies across the value chain are positioning to deploy state-of-the-art solutions to enable more advanced levels of system intelligence, real-time network visibility, energy… Continue reading Convergence of Water and Data Drives $20B U.S. Smart Water Forecast

Looking Beyond Drought, States Invest in Water Reuse

Traditional water supplies are no longer a certainty for many municipal water utilities across the U.S., sparking a wave of investment into water reuse projects, exceeding $18 billion in announced reuse projects. Without a doubt, California’s five-year drought has been a catalyst for recent project development. Utilities as far away as Georgia are looking to… Continue reading Looking Beyond Drought, States Invest in Water Reuse

It’s a Critical (and Exciting) Time for Water: A Preview of What’s to Come

2017 is going to be a big year for water. In fact, Suez’s CEO just predicted that “water is going to be more valuable than oil.” This was after Suez’s recent announcement to acquire GE water – in an effort by the French company to focus on industrial water and the US market. On this World Water Day… Continue reading It’s a Critical (and Exciting) Time for Water: A Preview of What’s to Come

What’s holding up Public-Private Partnerships in US Municipal Water?

Pittsburgh’s mayor has announced the city will explore the viability of contracting a private firm as a full financial and operational partner to Pittsburgh Water and Sewer Authority (PWSA). Bluefield Research has recently published market insight on public-private partnerships (P3s) highlighting both the rationale and the challenges for a move to outsource the utility’s management. The reoccurring issues of underinvestment, water quality events,… Continue reading What’s holding up Public-Private Partnerships in US Municipal Water?

World Water Tech Conference: Facing Reality, One Drop at a Time

Bluefield Research attended this year’s London gathering of the World Water Techconference series with guarded optimism. The incoming US administration promises a boost in infrastructure spending, commodities prices are rebounding to support water infrastructure investments, a plethora of new technology solutions are gaining traction, and panelists captured the water industry’s desire to see greater collaboration on a number of issues.… Continue reading World Water Tech Conference: Facing Reality, One Drop at a Time

CAPEX or OPEX? Lines Blur for Water Utility Spend

Municipal water utilities are looking for new financing approaches as they face the familiar challenges of massive capital improvement costs, rising operational expenditure, and razor-thin operating margins–all issues we’ve covered in depth in our US and European municipal water infrastructure reports. The predictable revenue streams from water supply and sewerage services should provide ample base for low-cost finance. But… Continue reading CAPEX or OPEX? Lines Blur for Water Utility Spend

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Where Do We Go from Flint? 

The impact of Flint, Michigan’s water crisis continues to reverberate throughout the US water industry after nearly two years. Concerns over drinking water quality, specifically contamination from lead pipes, have grown exponentially as Flint highlighted the issue for the public and water utilities around the U.S. Crews in Flint have replaced pipes for 800 homes through January… Continue reading Where Do We Go from Flint? 

To DMA or Not to DMA? That is the Smart Water Question

Since UK water utilities began subdividing their distribution networks into sectors in the 1980s, the practice of setting up district metering areas (DMAs) has become synonymous with good management. Operators can tightly monitor flow into these areas using flow meters, and apply night-time low-flow monitoring techniques to identify leaky areas. Now they can prioritize where leakage… Continue reading To DMA or Not to DMA? That is the Smart Water Question

Smart Water: The Future is Now

People take water for granted – they only notice when the water stops running or starts gushing, their usage is limited, or water quality is impacted. Today, water utilities are increasingly being forced to confront their crumbling infrastructure. As a result, consumer water rates have increased over 40% since 2010 and will rise even further. But there are many innovations in… Continue reading Smart Water: The Future is Now