Use less, lose less or pay the price
Rules on showerheads are changed by the Trump administration in its dying days.
Read moreWill Trump poison the well for Biden?
Speculation is rife that Trump will create problems for Biden before he leaves office. Foreign policy issues like the trade war with China and bombing Iran to prevent them from developing nuclear weapons grab the headlines.
Read moreInfrastructure bill passes Senate in USA
The Democrat-led House of Representatives has passed the infrastructure bill designed to upgrade the United States’ crumbling infrastructure. But its chances of being approved in the Republican-led Senate is zero.
Read moreArtesia Consulting & i2O Water strategic partnership
Artesia Consulting and i2O Water are delighted to announce a global strategic partnership that will make Artesia’s Data Analytics software available to i2O’s clients as part of the iNet advanced analytics solution.
Read moreWorld Water Day
The UN News says that water resources are often overlooked, but are an essential part of the solution to climate change.
Read moreIt'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.
Read moreRegulators 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.
Read moreSave water, drink beer
Glasgow, Scotland craft beer brand Brewgooder has come up with a cunning plan.
Read moreEarly 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.
Read morePoisoned 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Sky News reports that Basil Scarsella, CEO of UK Power Networks, has withdrawn his application for the role of Chief Executive at Thames Water, just as an official announcement confirming his appointment was expected.
Read moreThe 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.
Read moreDani'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.
Read moreNile 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.
Read moreLiquid 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.”
Read moreAll 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.
Read moreThe 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.
Read moreWater 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.
Read moreCut 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.
Read moreWe’re sleepwalking into a global water crisis
The warnings are there but no one's acting on them.
Read moreSADA 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.
Read moreToo 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.
Read moreAwash 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.
Read moreRising stress levels
And near misses... The New York Times reports that a quarter of the world’s population faces looming water crises.
Read moreResilience. 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.
Read moreToilet-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.
Read moreYou want another network to manage?
LoRa and Sigfox gain share but NB-IoT will win in the end…
Read moreiNet software does the work of 100 people
Using software to monitor the network is essential.
Read moreWater crisis hits industry in Mangalore
The media underplay the impact of a water crisis on industry.
Read morePegasus used to hack WhatsApp
Hackers have installed surveillance software on mobile phones using Pegasus, exploiting a vulnerability in WhatsApp.
Read moreExciting 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.
Read moreSMS 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.
Read moreBefore 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.
Read moreThe 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.
Read moreIT 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.
Read moreCanada’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.
Read moreCyber secure
The power blackout in Venezuela has caused widespread disruption. Including to the water supply. Tap water was said to have turned black. Dramatic pictures showed citizens going to extraordinary lengths to get water.
Read morei2O secures further investment
i2O is pleased to announce that it has received further investment from long-term committed investor Ombu.
Read morei2O’s Technical Support Team solve their 15,000th support ticket
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, have today announced that the Technical Support team have solved their 15,000th support ticket. Support requests range from analysing PRV behaviour to setting up tailored data extracts for regulatory reporting and new requests are typically replied to within 1 hour.
Read moreOrganisations struggle to corral data into useable and actionable intelligence
PWC’s CEO survey reports that organisations struggle to corral data into useable and actionable intelligence, and the main reason for their frustration is ‘lack of analytical talent’, followed closely by ‘data siloing’ and ‘poor data reliability’. i2O’s new iNet solution helps water companies address these three issues, and deliver actionable insight that will help identify and resolve network problems quickly (before customers call, reputation is damaged, and regulatory penalties apply), and schedule maintenance efficiently on the basis of condition rather than time/risk.
Read morePaying the price of water
When you look at the image from space, you’d wonder why anyone living near the Great Lakes in North America was short of water. Water isn’t usually a significant household expenditure. But in Chicago the cost of water for the average family of four nearly tripled in the last decade.
Read morei2O continue to contribute innovative thinking to the water industry – 2018 in review
In 2018, i2O added new clients, extended its smart network solution set, enhanced quality, further reduced hardware cost and passed it onto clients, and continued to contribute innovative thinking to the water industry.
Read morei2O launches new network monitoring, insights and analytics software solution
i2O is delighted to announce the re-launch of iNet as a full-blown network monitoring, insights and analytics software solution. Basic functionality—graphing of data and threshold alarms—will in future be provided as standard as part of the dNet solution.
Read moreDetecting network problems before customers do
Pace “Detecting Network Problems Before Users Do” by Stefano Gridelli of NetBeez, 13 June 2017 In a perfect world, water networks have 100% uptime and adequate pressure. In reality, customers experience loss of pressure, water quality issues, and outages. In under-invested networks, this is even more frequent. Yet, providing a good customer experience is possible. Detecting problems before customers do is not a fortune teller’s trick, but something that can be achieved with the right tools and processes in place. So how can Network Engineers achieve Zen for their networks?
Read moreDrought Contingency Plan
Lake Mead is a reservoir that helps supply water for 25 million people in Nevada, Arizona, and California, and some in Mexico. The dam that created the lake is the Hoover Dam, built in 1936. It is one of a series of dams in the West of the USA that store water and generate electricity enabling cities like Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and Phoenix to exist in the desert. The water enables farming as well as supporting habitation. Increasing population, rising demand and years of drought mean that the reservoirs are running low. Dean Farr’s data and interactive map illustrate the issue beautifully. The challenges and implications get excellent coverage in Vox.
Read moreToxic brine from desalination plants
A new study has highlighted the problem of brine discharged from desalination plants. More than half the brine comes from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar, with Saudi Arabia alone accounting for 22%. 3 countries - the Maldives, Malta and the Bahamas - meet all their water needs with desalination.
Read morei2O ships first 4G NB-IoT logger
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, has today shipped its first 4G NB-IoT (Narrow Band Internet of Things) logger. NB-IoT is a low power wide area network (LPWAN) technology from mobile phone companies that is now being switched on in a number of countries. It is designed to enable industrial devices to have access to wider and deeper network coverage with longer battery life and lower cost, at scale.
Read moreWe only have 12 years to save the earth!
Flash, I love you! But we only have 12 years to save the Earth! In the film of Flash Gordon, NASA scientists claim the unexpected eclipse and strange hot hail are nothing to worry about. Not so in our current reality. The most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report has warned that we only have 12 years for global warming to be kept to a maximum of 1.5C, after which even half a degree will significantly worsen the risks of drought, floods, extreme heat and poverty for hundreds of millions of people.
Read moreSummertime and the livin' isn’t easy
The UK Climate Projections 2018 study says that summer temperatures could be 5.4C hotter by 2070. The chances of having a summer as warm as this year’s summer (2018) is currently 15-20%. That’s going to rise to 50%. In other words, as likely as not. The warmer summers will also be much drier, with average summer rainfall dropping by 47%.
Read moreMind the gap
Ari Mahairas is the special agent in charge of the Special Operations and the Cyber Division at the F.B.I.’s New York field office. Peter J. Beshar is the general counsel of the Marsh & McLennan Companies, and has testified frequently before the US Congress on cybersecurity. The two have written an article in the New York Times pointing to the vulnerability of water companies to attack by cybercriminals.
Read morei2O partners with Ubisense to deliver powerful network monitoring and analytics solution for water utilities
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced a new partnership with Ubisense, the global leader in enterprise location intelligence solutions. The resulting integration of Ubisense’s myWorld platform with i2O’s network monitoring and analytics iNet solution provides water utilities with a powerful new way of identifying issues on the network and assessing the condition of assets on the network.
Read morei2O launches new Control Logger as part of its iNet network monitoring and analytics solution
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, has today announced the launch of its new Control Logger. The device is a pressure and flow logger with 3 pressures and bidirectional flow capability. This would typically be used at the entry to a zone on a PRV to measure upstream, downstream and control space pressures and record flow from the pulse output of a flow meter.
Read moreEnvironmental extremists and overzealous bureaucrats
We often cite as the challenges that water companies face: increasing and urbanising population, ageing infrastructure, water scarcity and more extreme weather events, more demanding customers, an ageing workforce, and difficulties in raising or accessing capital. The congressmen who are pictured around the President of the United States of America when he signed the Presidential Memorandum on Promoting the Reliable Supply and Delivery of Water in the West, issued on October 19, 2018, believe that it is environmental extremists and overzealous bureaucrats who have created the water crisis in the West of the USA.
Read moreNo water for 300 families in Greater Noida for 2 days
Greater Noida City is a north Indian city with a population in excess of 100,000, located in the Gautam Budh Nagar district of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh. A valve in the pipeline failed on Saturday. Residents complained about the lack of water. Water tankers were dispatched to provide temporary supply. Supply was resumed on Sunday evening. So reports the Times of India. It could have happened almost anywhere in the world.
Read moreWater wars
You may think that the Cape Town water crisis is over. But we can only really say that we’re past the peak reporting of it. There’s a fascinating article in the Columbia Journalism Review about the phrase “Day Zero” and the media campaign masterminded by PR agency Resolve Communications.
Read moreNext generation network monitoring
Next generation network monitoring. Coming soon from i2O... “A network monitoring system that: monitors the network for problems caused by bursts, leaks, changes in customer demand, theft, transients, engineering work, network design issues reports on the condition of assets in the network: pipes, PRVs, valves, pumps, flow meters, loggers, controllers, actuators reports on network performance
Read moreWhy go into the office?
There are certainly downsides to working from home: Social isolation Lack of support and input from colleagues Interruptions and distractions IT issues
Read morei2O launches new eNet event management software solution for water utilities
i2O is delighted to announce the addition of eNet to its suite of smart network solutions. eNet extends i2O’s ability to help its clients deal with the challenges of increasing and urbanising population, more extreme weather events, ageing network infrastructure, an ageing workforce, customers becoming more demanding, and difficulty in increasing revenue or accessing capital.
Read moreHow to win when the chips are down
Incident Management Software has the following benefits: Faster time to resolution Quick access to relevant information Reduced time to analyse and determine next best action Easy and automatic escalation No missed steps No duplicated activity Visibility from any location of progress and decision logic Quick review after closure for lessons learned
Read morei2O collaborates with Badger Software to extend its suite of smart network solutions
i2O is pleased to announce that its new event management solution eNet will be powered by Badger Software’s CLIO product.
Read moreWater crisis compounded by poor communication
The San Francisco Chronicle says that a new report identifies that poor communications compounded the challenges faced in Salem, Oregon, USA.
Read moreEvent management
“An incident is an event that could lead to loss of, or disruption to, an organization's operations, services or functions.” There are processes relating to managing an event, to bring it to a conclusion as quickly and effectively as possible before it escalates into an emergency, crisis or a disaster.
Read morePurchase price v lifetime cost
You may have read our thought piece about the lifetime cost of a logger.
Read moreAustralia worst ever drought
The world seems to be suffering droughts of greater severity than ever before this year.
Read moreTrunk mains
We often talk about ageing infrastructure as one of the challenges facing the water industry.
Read moreNew Android app will enable technicians to configure water network data loggers from their mobile or tablet
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has launched a new mobile application that will enable technicians to configure and view real time data from its data loggers using Android mobile phones and tablets.
Read moreFeeling the heat
Temperature records have been broken around the world this year. The UK is enjoying a heatwave. At least most of us are. But the water companies are feeling the heat.
Read moreRussians hack control rooms
The Wall Street Journal reports that Russian hacking group Dragonfly APT has accessed utilities’ control rooms.
Read moreNew Delhi the new Cape Town
New Delhi will run out of groundwater in two years as India faces 'day zero' crises, according to the Telegraph.
Read moreCan we trust AI?
“Can we trust AI?” asks Technology of Business reporter Marianne Lehnis. Before we answer or even ask that question, we should ask :“Can we trust humans?” They can’t always articulate why they make the decisions they make, and even when they do we know that this is mostly a post hoc rationalisation for an unconscious choice. And we also know that their brains contain hundreds of bugs. Not literal bugs. Software bugs. 166 of them! They’re known as cognitive biases and they’ve been categorised.
Read moreCan water companies handle big data?
In short, the answer is no. But not for the reason you might think. More monitoring devices, especially on the network, are yielding ever increasing volumes of potentially valuable data.
Read moreLet’s tow an iceberg
The situation in Cape Town was an obvious trigger for the revival of the ‘tow an iceberg’ answer. There’s a long history of iceberg lunacy. In 1825 it was suggested that they could be towed into the southern ocean to equalise the temperature of the earth.
Read moreNASA warns about water
Water shortages will be the key environmental challenge of the century according to NASA. New data from NASA’s Grace satellite has revealed the extent of the problem.
Read moreClimate change and growing global population threaten water security says UN
The UN has published its 2018 World Water Development Report. It calculates that global water demand is growing at 1% per annum mainly because of population growth. They say that whilst agriculture will remain the largest user, industrial and domestic demand will increase much faster. And the vast majority of the growth in demand for water will occur in countries with developing or emerging economies.
Read moreDemography is destiny
Of the 6 challenges facing water companies that we have identified (increasing population and urbanisation, more extreme weather events, an ageing network infrastructure, an ageing workforce, customers becoming more demanding, and difficulty in increasing revenue or accessing capital), the one that gets the least column inches is Ageing Workforce.
Read moreA smarter future for water distribution and non-revenue Water management
Our CEO Joel Hagan features in the latest edition of the Water Innovations magazine and provides his thoughts on how he believes innovation is helping to improve water distribution and non-revenue water management.
Read morePitbull – the global water terrier
It’s not often this blog provides a link to Rolling Stone. But it’s the music press that’s giving the most coverage to Miami-born Cuban American rapper Armando Christian Perez (also known as Pitbull, Mr. 305, and Mr. Worldwide) who has a new role as the United Nation’s Clean Water Here Global Ambassador, covered here in the NME.
Read morei2O invests in manufacturing its own Advanced Pilot Valves, passes benefits to water utility clients
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has added a new production line for manufacturing its patent protected Advanced Pilot Valves (APVs) at its state-of-the-art production facility in Woolston, Southampton.
Read moreRussian Government Cyber Activity Targets Water
i2O has sought to be a leader in information security. Why? Because we provide services to an industry that is responsible for critical national infrastructure. It seems that we were right to do so.
Read moreWater crisis will mean total crisis
The Global Risks Landscape 2018 from the World Economic Forum places Water Crisis as the 5th highest risk facing the world today. It has been pushed down the list by the increased likelihood of Cyberattacks and Data Fraud or Theft and their potential impact.
Read moreBeyond digital: Why smart water networks are a natural progression for the water industry
We recently wrote an article in December’s edition of Water Finance & Management journal outlining why we believe smart water networks are a natural progression for the water industry in order to solve the challenges they face; population growth, urbanisation and more frequent extreme weather events make delivering even adequate customer service through ageing infrastructure extremely difficult.
Read morei2O achieves gold standard for information security
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has achieved ISO 27001 certification, the internationally-recognised standard for best practice in information security and managing critical data.
Read moreSales expansion and the year of the logger - i2O’s 2017 in review
2017 has been the year of the logger at i2O as water utilities around the world monitor and report on network performance increasingly. We’ve seen demand for i2O loggers soar amongst our clients, and this has not been at the expense of other areas of our business.
Read moreThe future isn’t LPWAN
IDC FutureScape’s report that contains its Worldwide Internet of Things 2017 Predictions includes this:
Read morei2O begins production of next-generation logger
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has begun production of its next-generation smart data logger, Logger 17, to provide water utilities with greater insight from their distribution networks and improve how they access it.
Read moreThe biggest desalination plant in the West
The coastal cities on the West of the Americas including Tijuana are growing rapidly and drought is affecting the Colorado River on which they rely.
Read moreLiving on the edge
Edge analytics isn’t a form of extreme analytics with data scientists performing complex calculations on precipitous cliffs. So what is it, and why does it matter? It’s key to effective network monitoring. Here’s the theory:
Read moreSCADA isn’t a panacea
Kristina Foster, Marketing Communications Manager at Sensus and formerly of Schneider Electric has written an interesting post about asset maintenance.
Read moreH2O Will Trump CO2
Alpheus Water Research has written a wide-ranging piece explaining why they think that water will surpass climate change as the world’s main preoccupation in future.
Read moreLady Freethinker
Lady Freethinker is “a nonprofit media organization with the mission of achieving a free and compassionate world — for every species”.
Read moreKevin Starling appointed non-executive director at i2O
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that Kevin Starling has joined the i2O board as a non-executive director.
Read moreFalse alarms
How many false alarms do you get from monitoring equipment on your treatment works and distribution network? How many times are alarms cancelled with no need for further action? How often are you woken in the night by a car alarm going off? All too often, no doubt.
Read morei2O extends global sales force reach with eight hires in six months
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has completed a major investment in new talent and a tripling in the size of its global sales force since the beginning of the year. New i2O sales and client support staff are now in place in Europe, Latin America, Asia Pacific, Middle East, and North America.
Read moreThe S in SCADA isn't for Secure
The S in SCADA stands for Supervisory, not Secure. An article in the Harvard Business Review entitled “Smart Cities Are Going to Be a Security Nightmare” points out that SCADA systems are particularly susceptible to frequent hacks due to poor security protocols, and a lack of cryptographic security and authentication factors. This is largely because the software dates from the last century.
Read morei2O ships 15,000th smart data logger
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has shipped its 15,000th data logger. The device, built by i2O engineers at its assembly centre in Woolston, Southampton, has been shipped to Chile in a batch of loggers that will be used to monitor water pressure and flow in one of the country’s large urban water networks.
Read moreDrought: act now before it's too late
Droughts are occurring more frequently. Because populations are increasing and urbanising, the impact of drought on agriculture and people could be devastating. Major cities could run out of water and the resulting unrest could create civil strife, mass migration, and conflict.
Read moreThat sinking feeling
Sinkholes make great pictures. There’s something unsettling about the idea of the ground opening up and swallowing houses, cars, even people.
Read moreWater crisis
Let’s google “water crisis” in the news and see whether i2O’s list of challenges measures up (recognising that there is a skew to English language reporting).
Read morei2O appoints Silvia King to expand into the US
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has appointed Silvia King, an experienced business consultant and utility sector executive, to establish its presence in the US.
Read moreIt makes you WannaCry
The rapid global spread of ransomware WannaCry at the end of last week should have made everyone think hard about security.
Read moreDrought and about
California’s drought may be over for now but they’re heading into summer and California’s rain levels vary more than anywhere else in the United States. By 40 to 50% in either direction compared with eastern states which fluctuate by only 10%. So the outlook isn’t rosy.
Read moreMore extreme weather events
The U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that February 2017, December 2016 – February 2017, and 2017 year-to-date are the 2nd warmest in the 1880-2017 records. The previous year stays in 1st place.
Read moreWater: spiralling cost or drop in the ocean?
Water UK reports that the average household water and sewerage bill in England and Wales for 2016-17 will be £389 - an increase of £2 (less than 1%) compared with the previous year. Despite this small increase, water and sewerage companies will deliver a 5% average drop in real terms in prices between 2015 and 2020.
Read moreA new era for Water under Trump?
Water Technology Executive Jim Lauria has made an impassioned plea in An Open Letter to President-Elect Trump On Water.
Read morei2O doubles software development for smart water networks
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, announced today that it has doubled the size of its software development team in the past 12 months to ensure water utility clients can derive maximum value and insight about their networks.
Read moreRiparian reserves
Raconteur tells us a worldwide water crisis is looming. The context they give consists of two of i2O’s six major challenges for water utilities: climate change, and population growth and urbanisation.
Read moreSmart network innovation, growth & transformation - 2016 in review
2016 has been a year of expansion, innovation and acceleration at i2O. Smart water networks are increasingly seen as a high impact, low cost and immediate way for water utilities to address the challenges they face: increasing populations, urbanisation, more extreme weather events, ageing infrastructure, and more demanding customers.
Read moreAnalysts rate i2O as sector leader
Lux Research has identified i2O as a dominant player in the Internet of Things for the Water market.
Read moreOh my god…this is horrible
Nick Danby has written a great article in the Harvard Political Review about America’s Crumbling Water Infrastructure. It references 4 of the 6 big challenges that face the water industry globally: population growth (and urbanisation), ageing infrastructure, more extreme weather events, lack of new money. The other two are an ageing workforce (meaning knowledge is being lost) and greater customer demands (based on improved service from many other industries).
Read morei2O bolsters security capability with hire of cyber security expert
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that it has appointed Daniel Bradberry, formerly chief engineer at one of Europe’s leading cybersecurity consultancies, to oversee its cyber security activities.
Read moreSoftware R&D spending key to success
WaterBriefing reports PwC’s finding that firms who shift R&D spend to software and services have faster revenue growth, or, put another way, are more successful at creating solutions that clients value.
Read moreCould a botnet of loggers bring down a water utility?
The smart devices that make up the Internet of Things are proving very popular with malicious hackers. This is often because security wasn’t a key consideration for their manufacturers.
Read moreSave water: swap grass for gravel
Turf Terminators of California, USA allows residents to utilise water conservation rebates for turf removal. Rebates of $3.75 per square foot are available to Los Angeles residents for turf removal, the theory being that grass needs to be watered and without it water usage decreases markedly.
Read morei2O bolsters advisory board with Kevin Starling appointment
i2O, the smart water network solutions company, today announced that water industry veteran Kevin Starling has joined its Advisory Board.
Read more“SaaS” has given itself a bad name
The trouble with the name SaaS is that it’s an acronym. The acronym obscures the fact that SaaS is a service. People too often assume it’s just software. And that’s causing confusion.
Read moreSmart water networks set to become pervasive
Our CEO, Joel Hagan, recently wrote an article in July's edition of WIPAC Monthly.
Read moreGlobal Water Intelligence ranks i2O top quartile
In its latest report Global Water Market 2017, Global Water Intelligence ranks i2O above its direct competitors in terms of being both a market leader and having multiple solutions. i2O also ranks as top quartile alongside much larger companies: ABB; metering companies Itron, Sensus and Diehl; and leak detection specialist Gutermann.
Read moreWater utilities gain new insight from network data
i2O, the smart water network company, today launched a new software tool to help water companies monitor their networks and improve performance using data. i2O’s iNet software increases the ability of water companies to analyse and make automated decisions based on pressure and flow data and is the first software product available that diagnoses problems with Pressure Reducing Valves (PRVs) automatically.
Read moreWater: the urban/rural divide
A report from the BBC says that Nestle extracted 36 million gallons of water from a national forest in California last year to sell as bottled water, even as Californians were ordered to cut their water use because of a historic drought in the state.
Read moreWater, water, everywhere, nor any drop for jeans
A new article from the BBC reports that it takes an average 11,000 litres of water to make a pair of jeans. You probably didn’t realise that. It takes more than four litres to grow an almond and there are a lot of almonds growing in California, which continues to suffer from drought. Water is also used extensively in the Oil & Gas and Utility industries.
Read morei2O appoints CTO with extensive smart utility network experience
i2O, the smart water network company, today announced that it has appointed Steve Wilkes as Chief Technology Officer. He joins i2O from ONZO, a provider of data analytics insight to electricity companies and brings more than 20 years of technology experience gained building smart networks within the utilities sector.
Read moreSmart networks smoothing supply of water
The move to smart water networks is accelerating in the water industry because it allows utilities to confront their major challenges, extend asset life in the network, reduce operating costs and deliver better customer service without the high cost of building new supply infrastructure.
Read morei2O launches dNet solution at SWAN
Joel Hagan announced i2O’s new dNet solution to more than 180 delegates at the SWAN Conference in London on Tuesday and spoke about the major water industry challenges it helps to address.
Read morei2O develops new logging system to provide comprehensive low-cost water network data
i2O, the smart water network company, today launched dNet, a low-cost data logging and software system to provide water utilities with accurate, reliable and affordable data for informing decision making and improving water networks performance.
Read morei2O's oNet system turns legacy infrastructure into smart water networks
i2O has launched oNet, a new suite of technologies providing water utilities with the ability to monitor and manage the pressure and flow of water across their entire networks.
Read moreSmart Networks are the answer. What is the question?
Joel Hagan, CEO at i2O, has written an article addressing how Smart Networks can help water utilities tackle some of the problems produced by increased customer demand, ageing infrastructure and extreme weather conditions. This article is entitled ‘Smart Networks are the answer. What is the question?’ and is published on Water Online.
Read moreKevin Rutledge has been appointed to expand smart water network footprint
We are delighted to announce that Kevin Rutledge has joined i2O Water as our first Global Sales Director. A seasoned sales professional with more than 20 years’ experience working in the utility industry, Kevin is tasked with expanding our global footprint and helping many more water companies to improve their customer service, business efficiency and environmental performance with smart water networks.
Read moreSmart water networks will endure when the IoT bubble bursts
In its latest Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, the analyst firm Gartner places the Internet of Things (IoT) at the top of the life cycle phase it calls the ‘Peak of Inflated Expectations’. Beneath the hype there lies a reality: the IoT is delivering value in practical and unsensational ways that will endure.
Read moreKeith Hilson is our Head of Customer Solutions
i2O Water, the Smart Pressure Management technology company, today announced that it has appointed Keith Hilson, formerly of South East Water, as its new Head of Customer Solutions. Keith has 20 years of experience working with water utilities and is recognised as one of the industry’s foremost smart water network experts.
Read morei2O Water joins forces with Water Aid to improve access to water
i2O Water, the Smart Pressure Management technology company, today announced that it will support WaterAid as its charity partner. Currently 748 million people worldwide live without safe water and 2.5 billion people live without a toilet. i2O is delighted to support WaterAid’s vision and mission to provide water, sanitation and hygiene to everyone, everywhere by 2030.
Read moreJoel Hagan has been appointed as CEO
i2O Water, the Smart Pressure Management technology company, today announced the appointment of Joel Hagan as its new Chief Executive Officer.
Read moreWorld leaders say water crisis is number one global risk
Water security, according to the World Economic Forum (WEF), is one of the most tangible and fastest-growing social, political, economic and environmental challenges faced today. Based on its potential impact to Society, WEF ranks the water crisis as the number one global risk.
Read morei2O Water secures £8m funding to support expansion
i2O Water, the Smart Water Networks company, today announced that it has secured additional funding of £8 million to expand its research and development (R&D) activities in Southampton, UK, and provide additional commercial and technical support for its growing global network of partners and resellers.
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