US data centers directly consumed roughly 450 million gallons of water per day in 2021 (EESI, from USGS methodology), mostly drawn from municipal drinking-water systems. With US data center power capacity crossing 50 GW in 2025 and projected to reach ~135 GW by 2030 (FERC, 451 Research), direct cooling-water demand is on a path to roughly double or triple over the same period. The three tickers here represent two different ways to own that water flow: regulated utilities that pipe the water to the site (AWK, WTRG), and a water-technology company that sells the pumps, treatment systems, and cooling loops inside the building (XYL). AWK and WTRG announced an all-stock merger in October 2025 (expected close Q1 2027), so two of the three tickers are converging into one ~$61B enterprise. est.
Hyperscalers draw 97% of their cooling water from municipal drinking-water systems (Bluefield). A single 100 MW facility uses ~0.5 million gallons/day; a 300 MW campus uses 1-5 MGD. est. Northern Virginia data centers consumed nearly 2 billion gallons in 2023, up 63% from 2019 (EESI). At current build rates (25 GW under construction in the Americas est.), the industry would need roughly 700-1,200 MGD of direct cooling water by 2030 est. — and municipal utilities with pipe in the ground are the existing delivery mechanism.
The product is treated municipal water delivered to data center cooling systems, plus the pumps, heat exchangers, and treatment equipment inside those systems. Two distinct businesses touch the same molecule:
These companies own pipes, treatment plants, and distribution networks. They deliver potable water to homes, businesses, and increasingly data centers under state-regulated tariff structures. Money comes in as a regulated return on invested capital ("rate base") — they spend money building infrastructure, regulators approve a return (typically 9-11% on equity), and that return shows up as the water bill. A data center customer paying for 2 MGD of water service adds to rate base and earns the allowed return, economically identical to serving a small town. Revenue growth comes from (a) rate cases (asking regulators for price increases), (b) infrastructure surcharges, and (c) acquiring smaller water systems.
AWK (American Water Works) is the largest US regulated water utility — 14 million people across 14 states. FY2025 revenue was $5.14B, net income $1.11B, capex $3.2B. WTRG (Essential Utilities, formerly Aqua America, old ticker WTR) serves 5.5 million people across 9 states, with FY2025 revenue of $2.47B. WTRG also runs a regulated natural gas distribution business ($1.12B of that revenue).
Xylem sells the equipment that moves, treats, and manages water. For data centers: pumps and circulators for cooling loops (Bell & Gossett brand), heat exchangers, water treatment systems (via acquired Evoqua, a $7.5B deal closed 2023), and digital monitoring/analytics (Xylem Vue). Revenue comes from equipment sales and aftermarket services. FY2025 revenue was $9.04B across four segments: Water Infrastructure ($2.64B), Applied Water ($1.85B), Measurement & Control ($2.09B), and Water Solutions & Services ($2.46B). No segment isolates data-center revenue; it is embedded across Applied Water and Water Solutions.
AWK 10-K FY2025 (filed Feb 2026); WTRG 10-K FY2025; XYL 10-K FY2025 (filed Feb 2026).
EESI (2024 article citing USGS 2021 data); Bluefield Research (Jun 2025); Mordor Intelligence (2025); WTRG press release (Aug 2025, Greene County).
Bluefield Research (Jun 2025); EESI (2024); EPA municipal water statistics; NVIDIA Blackwell blog (2025); Mordor Intelligence (2025).
| Measure | Demand (2025) | Demand (2030 est.) | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| US DC direct cooling water (MGD) | ~710 | ~1,040 | +47% (8% CAGR) est. |
| US DC power capacity (GW) | 50 | ~135 | +170% est. |
| DC water spend (annual, $M) | ~$608 | ~$797 | +31% est. |
| Water intensity per MW | — | — | Declining (liquid cooling), but total volume still rises |
Water demand grows more slowly than power demand because liquid cooling reduces water intensity per MW. The gap between power-capacity tripling (+170%) and water demand growing ~47% reflects the efficiency gains from the shift away from evaporative cooling towers. In absolute gallons, demand still rises ~330 MGD — equivalent to adding a city of ~2 million people to the municipal water system. est.
Pricing mechanism: Municipal water rates are set by regulators, not markets. Utilities recover costs plus allowed return. Data centers pay the same industrial tariff as any large customer. Money flows through rate base growth (more pipe in the ground raises allowed revenue), not through price per gallon increasing. LA's Tier 1 industrial rate was $8.13 per 100 cubic feet in 2024. For equipment vendors like XYL, pricing comes from product mix shift (higher-value liquid cooling systems vs. commodity pumps) and the Evoqua treatment portfolio.
Mordor Intelligence (2025, 0.98T to 1.44T liters); Bluefield Research (2025, $797M); FERC/451 Research (50 GW to 135 GW).
| Ticker | Company | Role | Mkt Cap | EV | Rev (FY25) | Net Inc | P/E | DC Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AWK | American Water Works | Regulated water utility (largest US) | $24.2B | $42.1B | $5.14B | $1.11B | 21.9 | Serves DC corridors (VA, NJ, PA); DC-specific revenue not disclosed |
| WTRG | Essential Utilities (f/k/a Aqua America) | Regulated water + gas utility | $10.5B | $18.9B | $2.47B | $616M | 18.8 | $26M Greene County DC project (18 MGD); Mid-Atlantic footprint |
| XYL | Xylem Inc. | Water technology (pumps, treatment, digital) | $26.2B | $27.5B | $9.04B | $957M | 27.4 | Launched DC product suite late 2025; DC revenue not broken out |
AWK + WTRG merger: All-stock deal announced Oct 2025, shareholders of both companies approved Feb 2026. WTRG holders receive 0.305 AWK shares per share. Expected close Q1 2027, pending state utility commission approvals. Combined entity: ~19.5 million people served, 14+ states, ~$7.6B combined revenue, ~$61B combined enterprise value. Post-merger ownership: AWK shareholders ~69%, WTRG shareholders ~31%.
Not in this group: Ecolab (ECL, $65B market cap) acquired CoolIT Systems in 2025 for data center liquid cooling — a direct competitor to XYL in the DC water-treatment and cooling space, but primarily a chemicals company. Pentair (PNR, $14B) sells filtration and flow control for industrial cooling. Neither is in the ticker list but both compete for the same DC water dollar. est.
Stock prices and market caps as of Jun 2, 2026 (stockanalysis.com). Revenue/earnings from FY2025 10-K filings. Merger terms from AWK/WTRG press release (Oct 2025).
None of the three companies disclose data-center-specific revenue. The following table shows what each whole business costs today:
| Metric | AWK | WTRG | XYL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price (Jun 2, 2026) | $123.68 | $37.04 | $110.29 |
| Shares outstanding | 195M | 280M | 238M |
| Market cap | $24.2B | $10.5B | $26.2B |
| Enterprise value | $42.1B | $18.9B | $27.5B |
| Net debt | $15.5B | $8.1B | $1.3B |
| FY25 revenue | $5.14B | $2.47B | $9.04B |
| FY25 EPS | $5.64 adj | $2.20 | $5.08 adj |
| Trailing P/E | 21.9x | 18.8x | 27.4x |
| Forward P/E | 18.7x | 16.2x | 19.7x |
| EV / Revenue | 8.2x | 7.7x | 3.0x |
| Dividend yield | ~2.7% | ~3.7% | ~1.6% |
| EPS growth guidance | 7-9% LT | 5-7% LT | ~5-10% est. |
| Debt / equity | 1.42 | 1.18 | ~0.24 |
| FY25 capex | $3.2B | $1.4B | ~$0.4B |
| DC revenue (disclosed) | None | None | None |
Exposure dilution: AWK at $42.1B enterprise value includes 14 million residential and commercial customers whose water demand has nothing to do with AI. DC water exposure is embedded inside a much larger regulated business. AWK and WTRG carry heavy debt ($15.5B and $8.1B respectively) because regulated utilities finance infrastructure with debt backed by regulated returns. XYL has minimal net debt ($1.3B). In a rising-rate environment, the utilities' cost of capital rises and compresses equity returns; XYL's balance sheet is largely unaffected.
Prices: stockanalysis.com, Jun 2 2026. Financials: FY2025 10-K filings. Guidance: AWK and WTRG earnings releases (Feb 2026); XYL Q4 2025 earnings (Feb 2026).
| Source | What it covers | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| AWK 10-K FY2025 / earnings release (Feb 2026) | Revenue, EPS, capex, customers, guidance, merger | SEC filing |
| WTRG 10-K FY2025 / earnings release (Feb 2026) | Revenue, EPS, capex, segments, dividend, merger | SEC filing |
| WTRG press release (Aug 2025) | Greene County DC project, 18 MGD, $26M investment | company release |
| XYL 10-K FY2025 / Q4 earnings (Feb 2026) | Revenue, segments, EPS, margins, guidance | SEC filing |
| AWK/WTRG merger announcement (Oct 2025) | Deal terms, exchange ratio, timeline, approvals | SEC filing |
| EESI article (2024, citing USGS 2021 data) | US DC water consumption ~449 MGD, Virginia stats | secondary source |
| Bluefield Research (Jun 2025) | $4.1B cumulative water spend, 150.4B gallons, 97% municipal | industry report |
| Mordor Intelligence (2025) | 0.98T to 1.44T liters, 8% CAGR, Virginia Potomac basin | industry report |
| FERC / 451 Research / IEA (2025-2026) | US DC power capacity 50 GW, projections to 135 GW | industry/gov estimate |
| NVIDIA blog (2025) | Blackwell 300x water efficiency claim, dry cooler adoption | vendor claim |
| stockanalysis.com (Jun 2, 2026) | Prices, market caps, P/E ratios, enterprise values | market data |
Key uncertainty: No company in this group discloses data-center-specific revenue, volume, or customer counts. Demand-side numbers for DC water consumption vary by 50%+ between sources (EESI: ~450 MGD in 2021; Mordor: ~710 MGD in 2025; these may measure different things — direct vs. total, withdrawal vs. consumption). All forward projections depend on both DC build rates and the pace of liquid cooling adoption, which work in opposite directions on water demand per MW.