While millions worry about their carbon footprint, ChatGPT is quietly guzzling water like a marathon runner in the desert. Every time someone asks the AI chatbot to write a 100-word email, it downs about 500 milliliters of water. That’s a full bottle of Evian, gone. Just to compose your passive-aggressive note to Karen from accounting.
The numbers are staggering. Training GPT-3 alone consumed over a million gallons of water at Microsoft’s data centers. That’s enough water for five people’s entire yearly supply. Or, if you prefer, enough to manufacture 370 BMWs. All that liquid disappeared into cooling systems, keeping servers from melting down while the AI learned to write poetry and debug code.
But training was just the appetizer. Now comes the main course: billions of daily queries from users worldwide. A casual ChatGPT conversation of 20 to 50 questions burns through another 500ml. Multiply that by countless users asking for recipe suggestions, homework help, and relationship advice. The math gets ugly fast. Training one large language model can emit as much carbon as five cars’ lifetimes in addition to its water consumption.
Data centers need this water desperately. Without it, servers would cook themselves into expensive paperweights. Microsoft’s Iowa facilities slurped over 11 million gallons on particularly hot days in 2022. That’s not recycled water either. These systems demand high-purity water – basically the same stuff you drink. Microsoft’s overall water usage shot up approximately 33% between fiscal years 2021 and 2022, largely driven by AI operations. Companies are exploring immersion cooling to submerge servers directly in non-conductive liquids, potentially revolutionizing efficiency.
Microsoft’s Iowa facilities slurped over 11 million gallons on particularly hot days in 2022.
The projections should make everyone uncomfortable. By 2027, global AI could withdraw 4.2 to 6.6 billion cubic meters of water annually. That’s more than entire countries use. Denmark-sized countries, to be exact. Four to six of them.
Sure, context matters. A single hamburger requires 660 gallons of water to produce – equivalent to 200,000 ChatGPT queries. America’s leaking pipes waste 10,500 million gallons daily, triple ChatGPT’s estimated global consumption. But that’s cold comfort when AI adoption is exploding.
Every query adds up. Every generated email, every debugged script, every creative prompt drains a little more from the tap. The digital transformation turns out to be surprisingly wet. And getting wetter by the day.
References
- https://www.bluefieldresearch.com/behind-the-data-unveiling-the-water-footprint-of-artificial-intelligence/
- https://felloai.com/2025/02/the-real-environmental-impact-of-ai-how-much-water-does-chatgpt-use/
- https://generative-ai-newsroom.com/the-often-overlooked-water-footprint-of-ai-models-46991e3094b6
- https://savethe.ai/water/
- https://earth.org/environmental-impact-chatgpt/