** BWSSB officials inspecting screens at Bengaluru's new AI water command control center

Bengaluru Launches Asia's Largest AI Water Command Center

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India's tech capital is opening Asia's largest AI-powered water management center that can detect leaks instantly and predict demand across the city. The system could help Bengaluru save millions of gallons currently lost to leaks and theft.

Bengaluru is about to get a serious upgrade in how it manages water, and the technology behind it is straight out of a sci-fi movie.

The city's water board is launching the Integrated Intelligent Water and Sewerage Management Centre, one of Asia's largest AI-powered command centers for water systems. Think of it as mission control, but for every drop of water flowing through Bengaluru's pipes.

The system monitors the city's entire water network in real time, tracking 775 million liters of daily supply across 110 villages. It connects major treatment plants, storage tanks, and sewage facilities into one intelligent network that never sleeps.

Here's where it gets impressive. The AI can predict water demand across different neighborhoods and detect pipeline leaks the moment they happen. This matters because Bengaluru currently loses 28 percent of its water supply to leakage and theft.

The center tracks water quality constantly, measuring chlorine levels, pH balance, and contamination. If something goes wrong, alerts fire off immediately so teams can respond fast.

Bengaluru Launches Asia's Largest AI Water Command Center

Japan International Cooperation Agency helped fund the project, which is housed at Shimsha Bhavan in Jayanagar. Deputy Chief Minister D K Shivakumar will inaugurate the facility soon.

Beyond drinking water, the system monitors all sewage treatment plants to ensure they meet environmental standards. It even tracks biogas generation from these facilities, turning waste management into an energy opportunity.

The platform uses Internet of Things sensors, GPS mapping, and smart meters to predict when equipment might fail before it actually breaks down. This early warning system should cut maintenance costs and reduce energy waste.

The Ripple Effect

What Bengaluru is building could become a blueprint for water-stressed cities worldwide. As urban populations grow and climate patterns shift, knowing exactly where water flows and where it leaks becomes critical infrastructure.

Chairman Ram Prasath Manohar calls it a milestone that combines massive scale with cutting-edge technology. For a city that's struggled with water shortages, having AI watching over every pipe could mean the difference between crisis and stability.

This is what smart city technology looks like when it tackles real problems that affect millions of people every single day.

Based on reporting by Indian Express

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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