Michael Thompson and Charlotte Hughes examine the staggering scale of treated water lost through aging pipes and why municipal leaks are a major financial and environmental drain. They also explore how acoustic sensors, AI, satellite imaging, and pressure management are helping utilities protect this invisible infrastructure.
Episodes (4)
Charlotte Hughes and marine scientist Michael Thompson explore how wastewater is being transformed into a reliable source of drinking water, industry supply, fertilizer, and even energy. They also tackle the psychological hurdle behind reuse and why changing the way we think about water may be just as important as the technology itself.
This episode reveals the staggering freshwater demands behind AI models and semiconductor manufacturing, from data center cooling to ultrapure water production. It also explores how tech giants and chipmakers are responding with water-positive pledges, dry cooling, and aggressive recycling systems.
Explore how Wall Street’s first water futures market turned a basic necessity into a tradable asset, and why that move sparked fierce debate over speculation, conservation, and access. The episode also examines the UN’s human-rights concerns, Australia’s water-market fallout, and the growing pressure climate change is putting on how we allocate scarce water.
