AWS Sustainability service adds water withdrawal data
AWS Sustainability now includes annual water withdrawal data for customer workloads, complementing existing carbon emissions figures. This allows organizations to better track their environmental impact across carbon and water usage, with data available by region, service, and account via the console and API. The data, reflecting operational water use and efficiency, is provided at no extra cost in all available AWS Regions.
- →Add water withdrawal data to AWS Sustainability
- →Comprehensive environmental impact visibility
- →Water withdrawal data availability and cost
Features (1) ›
- Add water withdrawal data to AWS Sustainability
Customers can now view annual water withdrawals data associated with their AWS workloads within the AWS Sustainability service. This data is available alongside existing carbon emissions data.
Enhancements (1) ›
- Comprehensive environmental impact visibility
This enhancement helps organizations gain comprehensive visibility into their environmental impact across both carbon emissions and water usage. Data is available by AWS Region, service, and AWS account on an annual basis through the AWS Sustainability console and API.
Notes (1) ›
- Water withdrawal data availability and cost
The AWS Sustainability water withdrawals data is available at no additional charge in all AWS Regions where the service is available. The data represents the total volume of water withdrawn for data center operations.
https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2026/07/aws-sustainability-water-withdrawals/
Related releases
- Amazon Aurora DSQL now FedRAMP Moderate in scope on AWS AWS What's New ·
- AWS Billing Dashboards add Cost Efficiency widget AWS What's New ·
- AWS Backup adds logically air-gapped vault support to 6 more regions AWS What's New ·
- Amazon S3 drops 30-day minimum for Standard-IA and One Zone-IA transitions AWS What's New ·
- Amazon Managed Grafana Achieves FedRAMP High Authorization in AWS GovCloud AWS What's New ·
- AWS Backup restore testing expanded to six new regions AWS What's New ·