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Convergence of water and data drives $20 billion U.S. smart water forecast

Convergence of water and data drives $20 billion U.S. smart water forecast

Boston — The U.S. municipal water sector, which has traditionally been slow to adopt new technologies, sits at the cusp of change with more than $20 billion of forecasted spending on software, data, and analytics solutions over the next decade. As a result, more than 40 companies are positioning to deploy state-of-the-art solutions to enable more advanced levels of system intelligence, real-time network visibility, energy efficiency, and customer management, according to a new report from Bluefield Research, US Smart Water: Defining the Opportunity, Competitive Landscape, and Market Outlook.

A number of factors, including state legislation for water loss, aging infrastructure, and pressure on utilities to be more efficient, are driving interest in what is more commonly known as smart water. “Historically, utilities have been hobbled by their inability to generate actionable insights from disparate network and water usage data, but this is changing with more advanced data management and cloud-based solutions,” says Will Maize, a Senior Analyst at Bluefield Research. “Early adopting utilities, including American Water and East Bay Municipal Water District, are leading the shift towards smart water technology adoption.”

In the near-term, advanced water meters (e.g. AMR, AMI) will represent the lion´s share of forecasted expenditures at 82 percent from 2017 through 2026. A consolidated group of established metering players are expanding their product and service portfolios to leverage the value of data collected through their installed hardware. Market leaders, including Mueller and Itron, have moved downstream into communications, data management and analytics, while recent market entries via acquisition by Xylem and Honeywell will further reshape the competitive landscape.

Making inroads into 50,000 U.S. municipal water systems is no small task for vendors, particularly the new entrants without proven track records. The challenge is further heightened by their need to navigate utilities’ operating silos- back office operations, billing and revenues, and network operations.

The market is already beginning to take on a different shape. We are seeing larger, diversified companies enter the fray, utilities reshaping their mindset, and Silicon Valley-types applying data expertise. This combination has huge potential to change the way the U.S. water industry works,” says Maize. “If you looked at the smart water market a few years ago, there were just a handful players.”

US Smart Water: Defining the Opportunity, Competitive Landscape, and Market Outlook is available for purchase at https://www.bluefieldresearch.com/research/us-smart-water.