Surging 28%, US Municipal Water Infrastructure Forecast Reaches $532 Billion
Capital expenditures (CAPEX) for U.S. municipal water & wastewater utilities – including spending on pipes, plants, and pumps – are expected to exceed $532 billion between 2016 and 2025, according to new forecasts from Bluefield Research. This new outlook, which draws heavily from planned utility budgets, represents an almost 28% increase over CAPEX during the last ten years.
While CAPEX is forecasted to rebound, a significant decrease in federal funding for water utilities- which has fallen to $4.3 billion in 2014 from $16 billion in 1976- passes the burden onto states, municipalities, and ultimately ratepayers. Residential and sewer bills have increased annually 5% and 20%, respectively, since 2000, but their impact is expected to continue falling short of infrastructure needs.
Exhibit: Sizing the Market – Municipal Water and Wastewater Outlook
Source: Bluefield Research
Growth opportunities emerge within mature market sector
The enormity of the municipal sector’s capital requirements is compelling utility decision-makers to adopt new, more advanced and cost effective approaches to infrastructure management and build-out, according to Bluefield’s report. Going forward, markets for trenchless technologies, real-time data & analytics, or smart water, and advanced treatment solutions are expected to show significant growth. Opportunities for private capital in the municipal water sector are also expected to proliferate.
Staying ahead of 1.6 million miles of rapidly aging underground water and wastewater pipe networks poses the single largest financial challenge facing the nation’s municipal water utilities. Bluefield has forecasted an almost doubling of CAPEX on pipe networks from the previous decade, reaching almost $300 billion over the ten-year period. While construction companies and traditional pipe suppliers will maintain a stronghold on the spend, adoption of cured-in-place pipe rehabilitation and pipe bursting replacement is expected to surge as utilities seek to extend the life of installed pipe networks with limited system disruption.
A critical input for utilities to address overall system issues most efficiently will be found through data & analytics solutions, or smart water. Without more real-time insights into customer demands, network leakages, and bill management, utilities will continue to struggle with capital and operating costs, as well as cost recovery. Bluefield forecasts this burgeoning sector to total $12 billion over the forecast period.
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