Will smart meters save the world?

Don’t count on it.

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The cloud is the silver lining

Lockdown has demonstrated the value of cloud computing.

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Lessons From Lockdown

Not a school curriculum for remote learning but two observations.

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Wave for water

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World Water Day

The UN News says that water resources are often overlooked, but are an essential part of the solution to climate change.

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Coronavirus outbreak

Coronavirus is impacting most things. First the good news.

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It's alarming

The cost to instrument a network has fallen dramatically. You can get a pressure/flow logger for less than £200, US$260, EUR230 at today’s exchange rates. But what’s not so easy is to make use of the information that’s derived from those devices. Today we want to highlight just one function: alarms.

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Regulators get tough

The UK’s regulator is seen as having been tough on UK water companies in its recent price determination. Headlines such as “It's about time Ofwat got tougher on 'game-playing' water companies” suggest that there isn’t much public sympathy. But Northumbrian Water, Anglian Water, Yorkshire Water and Bristol Water are all appealing. Thames Water, who had been thought likely to appeal, accepted the determination because fighting it would be a “significant management distraction.” And they lost a CEO candidate in the process.

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Save water, drink beer

Glasgow, Scotland craft beer brand Brewgooder has come up with a cunning plan.

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Early detection

3 customer calls from the same area and you know you’ve got an incident so you’re out in the vans. Trouble is, that incident is already well underway by the time 3 different customers have decided that they need to call you. So here’s a different way of doing it: triangulation.

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Poisoned water chalice?

Sky News reports that Basil Scarsella, CEO of UK Power Networks, has withdrawn his application for the role of Chief Executive at Thames Water, just as an official announcement confirming his appointment was expected.

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The climate crisis is a water crisis

Tim Wainwright, Chief Executive of WaterAid UK, writes that throughout the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos in January 2020 he had one consistent message: for the world’s poorest, the climate crisis is a water crisis.

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Dani's dying to drink tap water

British actress Dani Dyer won’t drink tap water. She apparently thinks it’s poisoned deliberately by the Government and will eventually be used as a tool to cull the population.

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Nile dam deal nearly done

Reports have emerged of a deal between Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan in relation to the Grand Renaissance Dam. Ethiopia’s flagship dam on the Nile will power the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa at 6,450 MW, making it the 7th largest in the world. This will solve Ethopia’s energy challenges in one go and enable it to export energy to neighbouring countries. Currently 65% of its population are not connected to the grid.

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Liquid gold

Most people take water for granted. It’s only when it’s not available that we realise just how precious it is. The New York Times describes how private tanker operators in Kathmandu profit when water is scarce. “This is like liquid gold,” says a tanker driver, “maybe more than gold.”

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USA Iran conflict

All eyes on Iran

Countdown to a crisis Iran is facing a water crisis. The World Resources Institute says it’s number 4 on the crisis list after Israel, Lebanon, and Qatar. Water consumption is increasing, aquafers have been drunk dry, and investment is inadequate.

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california lacks a year of rain

The USA isn’t facing up to the full extent of its water crisis

The problem is quantity as well as quality. Over the last decade, the USA has been rocked by, and focused on, what happened in Flint. This isn’t the place to retell Flint’s story, the facts of which CNN has kindly set out for us all. But Flint is a water quality issue. When it comes to water quantity, or scarcity, then most Americans think first of Africa, India, the Middle East, or of Asia. They don’t in general think about their own country.

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Water will shape the world in the next 50 years

Along with AI, Algae, Implantable Tech, Climate Change, Cryptocurrency, Empathy, Genetics, Lab-grown meat, Surveillance, Universal basic income, and Virtual Reality. Experts’ predictions seem to be more heavily discounted than they used to be, but here’s a group of experts who answered a lot of questions, the answers to which were synthesized into 12 themes. One of those themes is Water.

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Ofwat_logo 2

Cut leakage and bills says UK regulator

£50 off the average bill and 16% reduction in leakage over the next 5 years. The UK water industry may have breathed a sigh of relief on Friday after the UK general election because it no longer faced being re-nationalised.

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Global temperature graph

Past the point of no return

It’s an inexorability.

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We’re sleepwalking into a global water crisis

The warnings are there but no one's acting on them.

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Water fountain

Foreigners drink New South Wales dry

Claims the "Uncoventional Economist"

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Limpopo

Just another South African water crisis?

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Dictionary

Desiccated dichotomy or trifecta?

Look it up...

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News

What will happen when water runs out?

Civil unrest...

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Chile drought: 34,000 animals dead so far

790,000 more in poor condition...

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wall-steel-metal-lock

How do you assess the security of SaaS?

Use two padlocks...

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Another teenager

Another teenager with an important message

Dilutes the message...

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Day zero

Day Zero for the World

Are you ready?

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Pumping Lake Cowichan

Boaters told to exercise caution when out on the water...

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SADA Logo

SADA embrace IR 4.0 with further investment in i2O's technology

Like large utilities around the world, SADA faces a multitude of challenges in providing a consistent and uninterrupted water supply to more than 2 million people in Kedah, Malaysia.

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DIY blog

DIY Disasters

And how to avoid them...

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Chile blog

Too little too late

There isn't time to build our way out of trouble. BNAmericas reports from Chile on the challenges the country faces with water supply.

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Data Lake

Awash with puns

Unity set to splash into the data lake... Amazon couldn’t have coined a happier name for its centralized data repository than Data Lake as far as the water industry is concerned.

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blog

Rising stress levels

And near misses... The New York Times reports that a quarter of the world’s population faces looming water crises.

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Prepared

Resilience. Are you prepared?

For terrible headlines and a massive fine... On Saturday nearly 1 million homes in the UK lost power. But it wasn’t just homes. It was airports and hospitals.

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Toilet to tap

Toilet-to-tap

Are you ready… Bangalore is India’s Silicon Valley. It was once full of pristine lakes and lush gardens. Now it’s a parched city of concrete.

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2 layers missing

Missing layers are starting to cause problems..

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Water needs a Greta Thunberg

Not a great iceberg…

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The future of software

SCADA, Billing, and NEMWACOR…

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Megacity runs dry

Official comment: only rain can save Chennai from this situation…

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Predicting conflict over water shortages

Can analytics really predict water wars…?

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You want another network to manage?

LoRa and Sigfox gain share but NB-IoT will win in the end…

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iNet software does the work of 100 people

Using software to monitor the network is essential.

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Water crisis hits industry in Mangalore

The media underplay the impact of a water crisis on industry.

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Pegasus used to hack WhatsApp

Hackers have installed surveillance software on mobile phones using Pegasus, exploiting a vulnerability in WhatsApp.

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i2O-Logger17 (2) (1)

Exciting time for water sensors

Ofwat associate director Alison Fergusson is reported as saying that the cost of monitoring and having real-time data has really come down.

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SMS fallback blog

SMS fallback? Do you have a typewriter in the office?

Using SMS as a fallback is like keeping a typewriter in the office in case the printer breaks. If you’re old enough, you’ll remember when offices only had typewriters. Then electric ones. Then word processors. Then computers. Let’s not mention fax machines.

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i2O Blog - Before the clock starts ticking

Before the clock starts ticking

Last week’s blog focused on managing incidents once you become aware of them, noting how i2O’s eNet solution can support you in being more effective at this.

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i2O Blog - The clock is ticking

The clock is ticking

When disaster strikes, the clock starts ticking. In a water company that could mean a water quality incident, a burst; a sewer overflow, a pollution incident; a physical security breach, an IT security breach; or a health & safety incident.

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IT weather forecast - cloudy

IT weather forecast: Cloudy

Read through Water Briefing’s list of tenders (yes, of course we do) and you will notice something interesting. It contains some unfamiliar acronyms: IaaS, PaaS and SaaS. PaaS doesn’t stand for Pizza as a Service, but it’s used as a fantastic analogy as part of a nice primer from Hosting Advice that explains the acronyms with the help of some clear diagrams.

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Canada’s water crisis

News from Canada’s Global Institute for Water Security. Climate change is going to wreak havoc with water supply. Glaciers are melting; river flows are becoming more unpredictable; and lakes are filling with toxic algae. Floods, droughts and wildfires, and the extreme damage they cause, are becoming more frequent.

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Taking a leak

Manneken Pis - the “peeing boy” – by renowned baroque sculptor Jérôme Duquesnoy in Brussels is a major tourist attraction.

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Rubber-Gloves

Top glove

You probably haven’t heard of the Top Glove Corporation. So you won’t know that it’s the largest rubber glove manufacturer in the world. It started in 1991 with a single factory and 3 production lines. Today it owns and operates 30 factories and more than 500 production lines in Malaysia, Thailand and China, with a capacity of more than 52 billion gloves per annum.

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Dam it

The building of dams often has consequences downstream. No more so than in the case of Ethiopia’s flagship dam – the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). The water will power the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa at 6,450 MW, making it the 7th largest in the world. The river? The Blue Nile.

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Remember where water comes from

Remember where water comes from

The Chinese proverb Remember Where Water Comes From can be found on the wall outside the offices of the Taiwan Water Corporation (TWC). Whilst the Taipei Water Department (TWD) looks after water for the capital, Taiwan Water Corporation is responsible for the rest of the country.

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colombia

It's time to visit Colombia

Your preconceptions about Colombia could be 20 years out of date. Now is the time to visit before the country is inundated by tourists. i2O has a number of clients in the country and is hoping to bring the benefits that those clients have achieved to other cities. Our CEO and Latin America sales team spent last week visiting the country.

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Anglian water reports

Anglian Water reports record low levels of leakage and interruptions to supply

Anglian has announced its preliminary results for the year ended 31 March 2016, which were picked up by Utility Week.

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