Australia’s AI and cloud-infrastructure boom continues to accelerate, with dozens of new mammoth data centres planned across Sydney, Melbourne and other metros. These facilities support high-performance computing, AI workloads, cloud services, streaming and other digital infrastructure, but they come with a growing, less visible demand: water.
This week, water utilities' warnings have drawn public and regulatory attention to the mounting challenge of balancing data-centre growth and water supply.
Why Water Matters for Data Centres
While data centres are better known for their power demand, water is the second major input, used for cooling server farms, reducing heat output, and ensuring hardware runs reliably. Traditional cooling methods often rely on evaporative or chiller-based systems that consume vast volumes of water, especially during hot/dry periods.
As demand for computing (especially AI) surges, the pressure on the water supply follows. For instance, in Sydney alone, water-utility projections indicate that by 2035, data centres could consume up to 25% of the city’s annual drinking-water supply if growth continues unchecked.
Current Situation in Australia
In short, the data-centre boom is outpacing the water-planning frameworks. Much of it remains built on “vague water plans” rather than real constraints.
Emerging Responses
Given the stakes — competition with residential water use, pressure on utilities, and community / environmental impact — developers and regulators are beginning to respond:
The shift is not just technical, it’s also regulatory and social. As more people become aware of the water cost of digital infrastructure, projects without sustainable water plans risk delays or even rejection.
What This Means for Investors, Developers and Policymakers
Risk Side: For Data-Centre Developers & Investors
Opportunity Side: For Tech, Infrastructure, and Service Providers
Australia’s emergence as an AI and data-centre hub represents a significant long-term economic opportunity, but the water footprint of this expansion is a material constraint that investors can no longer ignore.
Digital real estate is now about more than power and fibre. Water security and cooling efficiency are becoming critical determinants of project viability, regulatory approval, cost base and social licence.
For investors, developers and policymakers, the implications are clear:
As AI-driven demand continues to rise, the resilience of Australia’s digital infrastructure ecosystem will depend on how effectively the sector internalises and mitigates its water requirements. Those who plan with foresight will be best positioned in the next phase of growth.
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