Shaping the next generation of coastal water intelligence

Kohtari shares an update on the Ofwat-funded Smart Skies, Healthy Waters programme as it moves into design, combining drones, sensors and rapid testing to advance coastal water quality monitoring and deliver predictive water intelligence.
Kohtari strengthens leadership team with appointment of Lord St John of Bletso

Water Intelligence company Kohtari, has appointed Lord St John of Bletso as Strategic Adviser, supporting the company’s international growth, strategic partnerships and governance as it scales its water intelligence platforms.
We don’t need more data. We need joined-up water intelligence.

Why more data alone isn’t enough. Discover how joined-up water intelligence and open data can help predict algal blooms and move from reactive to proactive decisions.
What the Water Sector Reform White Paper means for water quality

How can water companies stay ahead of algal blooms? In this blog, we explore how rich datasets and intelligent AI can provide crucial early warning before blooms escalate.
Early Warning for Algal Blooms: Protect Water and Cut Costs

How can water companies stay ahead of algal blooms? In this blog, we explore how rich datasets and intelligent AI can provide crucial early warning before blooms escalate.
Kohtari selects Microsoft to Build AI-Powered Insights on Water Health

We’re excited to announce a strategic partnership with Microsoft to accelerate the development of our AI-powered water quality monitoring platform.
Two Months Ahead: Progress on Our Ofwat-Funded Coastal Water Quality Project

A look at the progress and key learnings so far as we pioneer a world-first approach to real-time coastal water monitoring with our £7M Ofwat-funded Smart Skies, Healthy Waters project.
Our smarter water quality monitoring in action

Watch our wrap up video and read our reflections from our latest drone-enabled water quality monitoring demo in Amble, Northumberland.
Why the future of water quality depends on smarter tech

We’re continuing our look at the Independent Water Commission’s report, published in July, breaking down what it means for the future of water quality monitoring (WQM).