Comment by belter

6 months ago

I am surprised by your analytical mistake of comparing irrigation water with data-center water usage...

They are not equivalent. Data centers primarily consume potable water, whereas irrigation uses non-potable or agricultural-grade water. Mixing the two leads to misleading conclusions on the impact.

That's a really good point - you're right, comparing data center usage to potable water usage by towns is a different and more valid comparison than comparing with water for irrigation.

  • They made a good point, but keep in mind that they're doing a "rules for thee, not for me" sometimes.

    The same person who mentioned potable water being an important distinction also cited a report on data center water consumption that did not make the distinction (where the 628M number came from).

This is not a distinction that your second link (that has the 628M number) was making either

> water evaporation from hydroelectric dam reservoirs in their water use calculations

  • The factual soundness of my argument is independent of the report quality :-) the report influences comprehension, not correctness...

    The fact data centers are already having a major impact on the public water supply systems is known, by the decisions some local governments are forced to do, if you care to investigate...

    https://spectrum.ieee.org/ai-water-usage

    "...in some regions where data centers are concentrated—and especially in regions already facing shortages—the strain on local water systems can be significant. Bloomberg News reports that about two-thirds of U.S. data centers built since 2022 are in high water-stress areas.

    In Newton County, Georgia, some proposed data centers have reportedly requested more water per day than the entire county uses daily. Officials there now face tough choices: reject new projects, require alternative water-efficient cooling systems, invest in costly infrastructure upgrades, or risk imposing water rationing on residents...."

    https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2025-ai-impacts-data-cent...