The MIG project will promote the digital transformation of the management of the drinking water service in Mexico to meet the objectives of sustainability and efficiency operate and maintain an efficient and fully sectorised drinking water system in the service area, thanks to the investments and improvements made in the previous three stages. In this way, the MIG project considers digital transformation as a key strategy in achieving the objectives of sustainability, efficiency and improvement of service management. The actions are focused on the development of new technological solutions aimed at obtaining real-time data from the different points of the water cycle, the centralised management and operation of networks, the automated regulation of pressures, the launch of work orders and the digitalisation of the micro-meters. To this end, Aqualia has developed various intelligent management systems that revolve around a single, centralised intelligent platform, called “Aqualia Live”, capable of integrating all the processes involved in water management, incorporating new technologies such as IoT (Internet of Things), Big Data, Cloud Computing and AI (Artificial Intelligence), with the aim of achieving more efficient and sustainable technical water management. Los Cabos is one of five municipalities in the state of Baja California Sur (Mexico), at the tip of the California peninsula. It is made up of the entities San José and San Lucas, both of which are internationally recognised as one of Mexico’s main tourist destinations. Its predominantly dry climate poses a water management challenge for the social, tourism, environmental and economic development of the area. The demand for water far exceeds the volumes available in the current supply sources, forcing the operator to exploit the available sources to the maximum by means of a system of tandeos. The development of the MIG Project will generate a substantial change and improvement of living conditions for its 202,694 inhabitants, as well as a boost for the economic activity of the municipality. The MIG project is a public-private partnership contract with the Organismo Operador Municipal del Sistema de Agua Potable (OOMSAPAS Los Cabos), which provides a portfolio of 53 million euros and contemplates an investment of 32 million euros (nearly 600 million pesos) for the modernisation, equipment, operation and maintenance of the water infrastructure. The Mexican government, through Banobras (Banco Nacional de Obras y Servicios Públicos), is financing 49 % of the total amount of the investment included in the project. The remainder, as provided for in the tender documents, will be financed by Aqualia. A tourist region that demands more water Digital transformation The MIG Project consolidates Aqualia’s presence in Mexico and maintains its position in the Americas. In Mexico, Aqualia was selected in 2018 to carry out the design, equipping, construction, commissioning, operation and maintenance of the Guaymas desalination plant in Sonora, for a total period of twenty years. The new facility, which has been in operation for more than a year, serves nearly 100,000 inhabitants. Since 2009, Aqualia has also participated in the concession of the El Realito aqueduct system for the piping and purification of water from the dam of the same name, in San Luis Potosí. The company is also part of the consortium of the Acueducto II System, which supplies 700,000 people in the state of Querétaro. Since June 2020, it has been managing and operating the wastewater treatment plant in the city of Cuernavaca, in the state of Morelos. More representative positioning in Latin America