Home\Latest News\2026 WateReuse Symposium Addresses Water Recycling for Artificial Intelligence, Reuse in the Midwest, and Potable Reuse Infrastructure 

2026 WateReuse Symposium Addresses Water Recycling for Artificial Intelligence, Reuse in the Midwest, and Potable Reuse Infrastructure 

Date: March 12, 2026

For Immediate Release 

Los Angeles, Ca. – The 2026 WateReuse Symposium brought together nearly 1,400 water industry professionals from across the nation and around the world this week. The event addressed critical topics in water reuse, including water recycling infrastructure for artificial intelligence, the growing prevalence of reuse in the Midwestern United States, and strategies to secure funding for potable reuse systems. Water reuse drives prosperity, sustainability, and public health for communities worldwide, and the Symposium focused on how reuse infrastructure can enable economic growth while ensuring water security for individuals and communities. 

Industry leaders, policymakers, and innovators convened at the Symposium to share insights on advancing technology, improving operational efficiency, shaping effective policy, and enhancing public communication around water reuse. “Water reuse is key to enabling economic growth while ensuring water security for communities,” said John Kmiec, WateReuse Association President and Director of Tucson Water. “From my Sonoran Desert community of Tucson to the water-abundant Great Lakes region and beyond, water reuse is an effective and growing solution to ensure economic prosperity and long-term water supplies.” 

Water Reuse for Artificial Intelligence 

On Tuesday, March 10, experts convened to discuss the key role of water reuse in the artificial intelligence revolution. The panel explored approaches to water security, opportunities for economic development, and collaborative partnerships between industry and utilities to advance innovative solutions. 

The panel featured a discussion with Bob Davis, Program Manager at the City of Quincy, Washington and Kelsey Grey, Senior Manager of Cloud and Innovation Sustainability at Microsoft, on Quincy and Microsoft’s partnership to create the Quincy Water Reuse Utility. The utility recycles water to cool Microsoft’s data centers in the region, sustaining digital infrastructure while preserving municipal water supply. Courtney Tripp, Director of Sustainability and Strategy for Grundfos, also highlighted the findings of a recent report on Accelerating Industrial Reuse

Tripp emphasized the importance of the Advancing Water Reuse Act (HR 2940), which would provide a 30% investment tax credit for companies which invest in reuse. “We need some mechanism to help with ROI, to help ensure more projects like Quincy come to life,” she said.  

The Road to Reuse in America’s Heartland 

Communities in the water-abundant Midwestern United States are proactively adopting water reuse programs to address aging infrastructure, groundwater depletion, nutrient pollution, and climate impacts. On Wednesday, March 11, utility leaders Gary Janzen (City of Wichita, Kansas), John Newsome (City of Columbus, Ohio), and Sharon Waller (Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago) shared how they are implementing water reuse programs to create long-term water security in the region. Anne Vogel, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Administrator for Region 5 – overseeing programs across Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, and 37 Tribal nations – also joined the discussion. 

The panelists shared the unique drivers which led them to adopt reuse, regulatory approaches, strategies for building public support, and funding mechanisms they leveraged to implement water recycling programs in their communities.  

The Price of Purification: Balancing Affordability, Resiliency, and Economic Benefits 

The Symposium’s closing panel focused on strategies to secure the significant funding required for potable reuse projects.  Propelled by population growth, climate change, and new regulations, communities across the United States are turning towards potable reuse to secure drinking water supplies. Utility leaders Angel Bustamante (El Paso Water), Anselmo Collins (Los Angeles Department of Water and Power), Tamara Richardson (Polk County Utilities), and Nazario Prieto (City of Phoenix Water Services Division) shared how they secured investments for pure water infrastructure, explaining the economic and social benefits of their projects and the innovative approaches needed to ensure a sustainable future for their communities. 

Utility leaders shared their communities’ unique drivers, how they secured support from elected leaders and the public, and the economic and social benefits their projects have delivered to their communities. 

The Conversation Continues 

Water reuse innovators reaffirmed their commitments to continue collaborating on the future of water resilience. Upcoming national gatherings include: 

  • The 42nd Annual WateReuse Symposium, Caesars Palace Las Vegas, March 1-4, 2027 

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Contact: Ben Glickstein | bglickstein@watereuse.org | (571) 445-5513 

The WateReuse Association is the nation’s only trade association solely dedicated to advancing laws, policy, funding, and public acceptance of recycled water. Our membership includes utilities that recycle water, businesses that support the development of recycled water projects, and consumers of recycled water. 

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