Gradiant: Gradiant announced that its end-to-end cooling water solution for artificial intelligence (AI) data centres, HyperSolved, is now deployed with several of the world's largest hyperscale operators, supporting mission-critical infrastructure across major global markets. HyperSolved integrates the full cooling water lifecycle, from sourcing to discharge, into a single platform delivered by one accountable partner. Purpose-built for hyperscale environments, it reduces complexity, improves reliability, and accelerates deployment.
According to BERNAMA News Agency, Gradiant Chief Executive Officer, Prakash Govindan, highlighted the challenges of managing water through a patchwork of vendors and solutions not designed for hyperscale operations. He stated that HyperSolved treats water as critical infrastructure, designed, delivered, and operated as one integrated system. Sankar Natarajan, Head of Special Projects at Gradiant, emphasized that integrating water into a single system allows it to perform with the same reliability and accountability as power or cooling, providing operators a clearer path to scale with fewer risks.
AI infrastructure is expanding rapidly, with global data centre capacity expected to increase six-fold between 2025 and 2035. These next-generation facilities demand significantly more power and cooling than traditional computing, driving a substantial rise in water consumption. Gradiant stated that HyperSolved expands access to alternative water sources, including municipal reuse and other impaired supplies, reducing reliance on freshwater and increasing site flexibility while protecting cooling performance through integrated treatment.
Engineered for the pace of AI development, HyperSolved supports rapid deployment through containerised systems, enabling immediate or temporary capacity to support rapid build timelines, and delivers optimised long-term performance through permanent infrastructure. Gradiant is witnessing strong commercial adoption of HyperSolved among leading hyperscale operators, reflecting rising demand for integrated water infrastructure. The company expects data centres to account for approximately 25 per cent of its global business by 2027, as water becomes a defining factor in where and how AI infrastructure is built.
HyperSolved is available globally, supporting hyperscalers, data centre developers and operators, and engineering partners across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.