New UKWP white paper reveals AI opportunities for water sector

The UK Water Partnership (UKWP), in collaboration with British AI and data firm Aiimi, has published a new white paper, AI Within Reach, laying out a roadmap for responsible artificial intelligence adoption across the UK water sector and outlining potential use cases.

As the industry enters AMP8, companies face mounting pressure to deliver ambitious capital programmes, respond to climate change, and improve resilience – all while maintaining affordability for customers. AI presents a critical opportunity to help achieve these goals, but without coordinated action, much of its potential may remain untapped.

A sector rich in data, but poor in insight

The water sector is uniquely well-positioned for AI transformation. With decades of data from infrastructure, customer interactions and environmental monitoring, the sector is data-rich – yet insights are often locked in siloed systems.

The white paper outlines how, by organising and labelling siloed data, water companies can unlock AI innovation and enable the implementation of practical tools such as customer chatbots, predictive maintenance, smart energy management, and climate risk platforms, delivering real benefits to the sector.

Real-world use cases and recommendations

The white paper outlines practical, scalable applications of AI already in development across the sector, including:

  • Predictive maintenance reducing leaks and unplanned downtime
  • Customer chatbots explaining storm overflow data in plain English
  • Smart energy systems optimising pump usage with renewables
  • Climate risk platforms identifying vulnerable infrastructure

It also identifies barriers to adoption, including the lack of enabling policy, regulatory uncertainty, and skills gaps, and provides recommendations for overcoming them.

Collaboration as a catalyst for change

The white paper calls for greater collaboration across utilities, regulators, technology providers, and academia to accelerate AI maturity in the sector. By embedding AI into long-term planning, the water industry can enhance operational resilience, support decarbonisation, and create better outcomes for customers and the environment.

Steve Salvin, CEO of Aiimi comments: 

“Water companies are under immense pressure. The sector faces growing challenges from climate change, the push for greater efficiency, and rising costs. At the same time, customer expectations have never been higher.

“This white paper is about cutting through the noise to show where AI can actually make a difference. Not by replacing people, but by equipping them with better tools to manage complexity, spot risks earlier, and make more confident decisions.

“Most companies already have the data. This is about unlocking it safely, responsibly, and effectively. Starting small, with solutions that work. That is how we move from pilots to real progress.”

Chris Newsome, UKWP Director comments

“The future of our industry depends on our ability to innovate, embrace new technologies, and often re-think how we do things. With ambitious plans in place for AMP8, AI will be crucial in the delivery of new assets; providing efficient ways to interrogate and interact with data, and enabling process automation, especially within supply chains.

“Adopting these technologies incrementally enables us to learn as we go – and share those learnings through collaboration both within and outside of our sector. I’m optimistic about our ability to leverage AI to get the best outcomes for our customers, the environment, and our businesses, and I encourage our industry leaders to take action now – our future generations will thank us for it.”  

NEWS CATEGORIES

LATEST NEWS

Strike action hits Scottish Water this week as pay dispute continues

Scottish Water workers have gone on strike today after rejecting the water company's latest pay offer. Members of GMB, Unite and Unison will strike from...

Yorkshire Water fined £350,000 after one of its sewage pumping stations polluted a York watercourse

Following an investigation by the Environment Agency, Yorkshire Water appeared at York Magistrates’ Court on Friday 30 May for sentencing for two offences –...

Ofwat launches consultation on rules for bulk charges for new appointees

Ofwat has launched a consultation setting out its proposal to issue new rules for incumbent English water companies to comply with, when setting their...

Overall trust hits a new low – Mike Keil, Chief Executive, Consumer Council for Water, discusses CCW’s latest findings

Mike Keil, Chief Executive of the Consumer Council for Water (CCW), discusses the findings of the CCW’s annual Water Matters survey, which finds that...