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Are data centers drying up the Grand River?

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Good morning from the Region — three cities, one wire, zero time for small talk. Let's go.

### You won't believe what's happening with our water

Here’s the thing about this Region. We pride ourselves on innovation, on the tech sector. But sometimes, all that shiny new infrastructure and the companies that come with it create problems that feel, well, a bit old-fashioned. Like not having enough water. There's a post blowing up on r/waterloo right now, and it’s got people really riled up: "You can't water your lawn, but the data centers can use millions of gallons of water per day."

This isn't just some anonymous online grumbling. It hits a nerve because it feels so true for so many in Kitchener and Waterloo. We just came out of a heat wave, and the Region had those outdoor water restrictions in place, telling everyone no watering lawns or washing cars. Meanwhile, the huge server farms, these massive buildings full of computers that keep the whole digital economy humming, they need colossal amounts of water for cooling. It's a proper catch-22, and it makes people wonder if we’ve got our priorities straight. It's not just about lawns, it’s about the Grand River's health and our entire water supply.

* **The Problem:** Residential users face water restrictions during dry spells, while large commercial operations, specifically data centres, consume vast quantities for cooling.

* **The Feeling:** This creates a sense of unfairness and questions the Region's water management strategy, particularly in a community that values environmental stewardship.

* **The Location:** While specific data center locations aren't always public, the concentration of tech in areas like the Tannery District in Kitchener and the University of Waterloo area means significant water demand is woven into our urban fabric.

This isn’t just about feeling a bit put out when your grass turns brown. It’s about the long-term sustainability of our shared resources. When we talk about growing the tech sector, which we do constantly, we also need to talk about the real, physical impact that growth has on things like our water supply. The Grand River is the lifeblood of this area, and seeing it stressed while new, thirsty industries move in makes people properly anxious. It’s a genuine "what now?" moment for Kitchener-Waterloo.

Anja Baumann-Fong, Morning Wire correspondent, MiTL Sports Desk.

My Oma and Opa break this down every morning, you should too — catch it live at mornings.live.

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The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →