Global Water Preps 2025 Earnings Call as Growth and Water Scarcity Collide in the Southwest
The call will take place on March 5th

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Global Water Resources is getting ready to walk investors through how 2025 shaped up — and the conversation is coming soon.
The Arizona-based utility company Global Water Resources, Inc. announced it will host its full-year 2025 earnings conference call on Thursday, March 5, 2026, at 1:00 p.m. Eastern time. Financial results will be released earlier that day, followed by a live presentation from company leadership and a Q&A session.
For a company operating in some of the fastest-growing — and driest — parts of the Southwest, the call will offer a snapshot of how demand, conservation efforts, and infrastructure investments are balancing out across metro Phoenix and Tucson.
Global Water owns and operates 39 water, wastewater, and recycled water systems across Arizona’s growth corridors. A major part of its business model centers on what it calls “Total Water Management” — an approach that manages drinking water, wastewater, and reuse within the same service areas to squeeze more value out of every gallon.
That strategy has helped the company recycle more than 1 billion gallons of water each year, totaling nearly 19 billion gallons since 2004. The goal is simple but increasingly critical in the desert Southwest: stretch limited water supplies while population keeps climbing.
The company’s reuse and conservation work has earned national recognition, including honors from groups led by the Water Environment Federation for advancing modern water reuse practices.
Investors and industry watchers will be listening closely for updates on system growth, water demand trends, and how Global Water is positioning itself as long-term drought pressures continue reshaping utility planning across the West.
The webcast will be available through the company’s investor page, with a replay posted later the same day.
In a region where every drop counts, Global Water’s results offer a real-world look at how utilities are adapting to growth, scarcity, and the push for smarter water management — all at once.
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