Amazon points to water conservation steps in India amid data centre scrutiny


A visitior stands near a logo of Amazon during the annual Retail Leadership Summit in Mumbai, India, February 27, 2025. REUTERS/Hemanshi Kamani

MUMBAI, June 19 (Reuters) - Amazon said on Friday its Indian operations had ⁠reached a major milestone in water conservation, at a time when global ‌tech giants face increasing pressure over their expansion of resource-hungry AI data centres.

The U.S.-based company announced it had turned "water positive" in India this year - meaning it returns more water to communities than ​it uses across its operations, which include data centres, ⁠corporate offices and warehouses.

It said ⁠it accomplished the goal a year earlier than planned, both by reducing water use ⁠at ‌its facilities and through projects such as watershed restoration and efficient irrigation.

Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet's Google are among companies that are facing shareholder ⁠and activist pushback over the environmental impact of data ​centre projects, Reuters reported ‌earlier this year.

Amazon has set a goal to become water positive globally ⁠in its data ​centre operations by 2030. The company said it does not use water to cool its Indian data centres.

The issue of water is particularly acute in India, which is home ⁠to 18% of the global population but only ​4% of the world's freshwater resources.

The summer generally brings shortages and rationing, and this year is particularly severe, with a strong El Nino resulting in weak monsoon rains.

Among ⁠the hardest hit states are Karnataka, home to tech-hub Bengaluru, and Maharashtra, where financial capital Mumbai is located. Mumbai, with a population of 13 million, has just 40 days' worth of water left, authorities said this week.

Amazon is expanding its ​footprint in India, where it plans to invest more ⁠than $35 billion by 2030 to boost AI capabilities and exports.

Its cloud services provider, ​Amazon Web Services, plans to invest about $8.2 billion in ‌Maharashtra, India's information technology ministry said last ​year.

Microsoft and Google have also announced sizeable data centre investments in India over the past year.

(Reporting by Ashwin Manikandan; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

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