Home • Our Coverage • Stormwater
Stormwater
Stormwater infrastructure assets, designed to handle historical levels of precipitation, are increasingly insufficient to withstand the frequency and severity of today’s storms. In the U.S. alone, stormwater and flooding events have been responsible for US$156.8 billion in damages since 2000, according to the National Oceanic Atmospheric Association, driving the deployment of more hardware, innovative solutions, and capital toward U.S. stormwater infrastructure. According to an article in Nature Climate Change, flood damage in Europe is expected to reach €44 billion per year in the long term (2020–2050).
Recent Analysis

Valencia Floods Expose Early Warning Gaps

Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA): Tracking the Spending, Q4 2024

Storm Boris Tests Central Europe Flood Control

U.S. & Canada Municipal Utility Capital Improvement Plans: Water, Wastewater, & Stormwater Budget Outlook, 2024–2032

U.S. Water Pipe Vendor Strategies: Manufacturing Facilities, Market Share & Company Rankings

U.S. Stormwater Infrastructure Market: Key Drivers, Competitive Shifts & Investment Outlook, 2024–2030


Harmful Algal Blooms:

France PFAS Ban Advances Europe Remediation

EU Struggles to Enforce Wastewater Regulations While Expanding Scope

3M Windfall for Impacted PFAS Water Systems

Read more research on water quality
Key Research Questions

How are companies leveraging digital technologies to address stormwater management?

Which leading stormwater infrastructure and equipment providers have been pursing M&A?

What is the opportunity for stormwater in the commercial and industrial sector?

How has Europe relied on early stormwater detection and how successful has it been?
Stormwater Data
US$54.5 billion
forecast for U.S. stormwater market by 2030
57%
of stormwater spend will come from commercial & industrial segments
60%
of U.S. stormwater CAPEX is tied to labor, with equipment making up the rest
US$362 billion
forecasted spend for stormwater infrastructure in the U.S. through 2030 – driven by rising climate risk, increased regulation, and private sector activity
Talk to our water experts about stormwater