

At Jacobs, we're challenging today to reinvent tomorrow by solving the world's most critical problems for thriving cities, resilient environments, mission-critical outcomes, operational advancement, scientific discovery and cutting-edge manufacturing, turning abstract ideas into realities that transform the world for good. With approximately $16 billion in annual revenue and a talent force of more than 60,000, Jacobs provides a full spectrum of professional services including consulting, technical, scientific and project delivery for the government and private sector.
For more than 70 years, our teams have provided integrated solutions to help solve the most complex and hazardous challenges of space exploration. We invent by imagining what’s possible.
A curated selection of some of the top-listened to and trending podcast episodes from our popular If/When podcast series, which has over 6M downloads to date.
Sit down with our visionary team of thinkers, dreamers and doers to see what a day in the life is like.
As our clients navigate the digital transformation and growing cyber risks, we have positioned ourselves at the forefront of this growth, adding digital capabilities, products and tools to serve a growing set of customers.
Together with our visionary partner, PA Consulting, we're establishing our position in high end advisory services, creating a springboard to expand in high value offerings beyond the core.
The only certainty about the future is uncertainty. Resilience is an attribute of a smarter planet, and requires planning and adapting ahead of potential threats. We help our clients survive, recover, adapt and thrive.
Jacobs. A world where you can.
As a purpose-led company, we know we have a pivotal role to play in addressing the climate emergency. We consider this not only good business, but our duty to channel our technology-enabled expertise and capabilities toward benefitting people and the planet.
For more than 30 years, Jacobs has been responsible for planning and implementing Lead and Copper Rule-related strategies which protect millions of people in the U.S. and Canada. Our work includes enhanced water quality monitoring strategies, sampling plan development, harvested pipe-scale analysis, lead service line inventories and replacement plans, corrosion control studies and the incorporation of equity and environmental justice considerations into compliance programs.
Jacobs is working to help clients across the United States secure federal funding for projects that make our cities and communities more connected and sustainable. Working hand-in-hand with clients from coast to coast and everywhere in between, Jacobs develops bold, innovative solutions to address the nation’s toughest challenges.
Now more than ever, we appreciate the hard work, sacrifice and dedication of the medical profession in ensuring the health and safety of our communities.
Together, we are stronger. Together, we can transform the future.
We work in partnership, delivering some of the most challenging, diverse and innovative projects and programs globally across multiple sectors. We integrate complex interfaces across planning, procurement and delivery to help unlock better social, environmental and economic outcomes from mega and giga projects.
We’ve provided design-build services to the water sector for over 25 years and delivered more than 150 projects. We offer fully integrated design-build and design-build-operate capabilities to tackle the most complex water challenges and work in close collaboration with our clients.
As climate change threatens water security around the world, more communities are turning to water reuse as a resilient water supply solution and embracing the OneWater principle that all water has value. Jacobs has been supporting clients with water reuse programs for decades, beginning with the first applications of advanced wastewater treatment technologies in the 1960s. We provide our clients with a full range of services, from water reuse feasibility studies to design, construction and operations.
Jacobs’ deep experience with advanced technology systems and our wide-ranging program support capabilities make us a premier partner at locations across the world. We deliver the right talent, tools and processes to support and enable our customers’ missions.
The National Air and Space Museum's One World Connected exhibit will tell the story of how flight fostered two momentous changes in everyday life: the ease in making connections across vast distances and a new perspective of Earth as humanity’s home. Below are some stories from Jacobs that also highlight the connections and digital solutions we are making around the world.
Stories that capture our partnerships and innovative impact for a more connected, sustainable world
Water taps are running dry in India and South Africa. California is once again facing a drought; Australia is currently in the grips of a super drought – the hottest and driest on record; and in 2015, drought and inefficient infrastructure led to a severe water shortage crisis in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Rain falling across the Asia Pacific is causing severe flooding and some hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rican communities still do not have access to critical water and power supplies more than two years after Hurricane Maria. Similarly, residents of Flint, Michigan, are still reeling from the effects of a contaminated drinking water system.
Each year, the natural and human-made threats to our global water supply get more complex; while populations surge and the demand for water across industries increases. More than 2.1 billion people lack access to safe water around the world and The World Economic Forum continues to list water crises as one of the top ten global risks both in terms of likelihood and impact each year.
The crisis facing our water supply demands a new way of thinking to create integrated, smart and sustainable solutions that embrace the challenges facing our world today – because if current usage trends don’t change, our world will have only 60% of the water it needs in 2030.
But what if we showed you how Singapore’s Public Utilities Board (PUB) and Jacobs turned water vulnerability into an opportunity to pilot new technologies and innovative solutions – serving as an international model for water management that extends across all facets of the water cycle to create a sustainable legacy for years to come?
of Singapore's water demand in 2060 will be met with NEWater reuse
Olympic-sized swimming pools - or about 430 million gallons - of current daily water demand
cubic meters of used water treated per day for reuse to meet both industrial and drinking water needs
energy recovered from used water and more electricity exported to the national grid from the Tuas Nexus
“The truth is, all water is reused since there is truly no new water on the planet. Organizations, such as PUB, have safely reused wastewater to augment their water supplies for decades.The technology is there, but the real challenge is developing a thoughtful way to implement potable reuse programs because of public acceptance. In Singapore, every project we’ve worked on with PUB has been characterized by strong partnerships between a most innovative client and consultants and contractors who share PUB’s vision, and with the community who understands water and sustainability better because of Singapore’s investment in education – that’s what flipped the script in Singapore.”
Peter Nicol
Jacobs Global Director of Water (Retired)
In 1965, when Singapore became independent, the island nation faced such water stress that they had to ration the precious resource just to meet minimum needs. Today, thanks to an integrated water management strategy nationwide, Singapore is one of just a few cities in the world to harvest its stormwater and practice large-scale water reuse as part of its diversified water supply approach.
Cultivating a nearly 30-year relationship, Jacobs has worked closely with Singapore’s PUB, delivering major cross-sector infrastructure projects in water and industrial facilities, including serving as program manager and designer for the award-winning Deep Tunnel Sewerage System (DTSS) and the Changi Water Reclamation Plant, one of the world’s largest water reclamation projects; the iconic NEWater Plant and Visitor Centre, an international landmark for educating the world about water reuse; and the Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters (ABC Waters) program, which transformed the waterbodies in Singapore beyond their utilitarian functions, creating new community spaces as well as higher quality living in Singapore.
In 2015, we received the Stockholm Industry Water Award for pioneering methods to clean water and increasing public acceptance of recycled water and our work with Singapore’s PUB in the early 2000s is a key milestone in our potable water reuse journey and helped evolve water reuse practices, proving not only the safety of potable reuse, but helping win public acceptance with the country’s NEWater project. By pioneering a hands-on transparent approach to public outreach and conducting the most sophisticated and comprehensive study of reclaimed water to date, the project fully integrated the best in technology with the best in public education tools to create unprecedented public acceptance of water reuse.
PUB developed NEWater, its own brand of ultraclean, high-grade reclaimed wastewater. Singapore has 5 NEWater plants which further purify treated, used water to produce this NEWater, which has passed more than 150,000 scientific tests and meets and surpasses World Health Organization and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards for drinking water.
With the country’s water demand expected to double by 2060, Singapore is looking to use NEWater to meet more than half of this future water demand. Key to meeting this goal is the Deep Tunnel Sewerage System (DTSS), a super highway to collect all the used water for further reclamation into NEWater.
The first phase of DTSS covers the eastern half of Singapore while the second phase will take care of the western side of the island. A key component of the DTSS Phase 2 is the Tuas Water Reclamation Plant (WRP), a new facility under design in the west of Singapore that Jacobs is leading the detailed design. When completed, the plant will treat 800,000 cubic meters of used water per day for reuse to meet both industrial and drinking water needs and be the largest membrane bioreactor facility in the world!
PUB developed NEWater, its own brand of ultraclean, high-grade reclaimed wastewater. Singapore has 5 NEWater plants which further purify treated, used water to produce this NEWater, which has passed more than 150,000 scientific tests and meets and surpasses World Health Organization and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards for drinking water.
With the country’s water demand expected to double by 2060, Singapore is looking to use NEWater to meet more than half of this future water demand. Key to meeting this goal is the Deep Tunnel Sewerage System (DTSS), a super highway to collect all the used water for further reclamation into NEWater.
The first phase of DTSS covers the eastern half of Singapore while the second phase will take care of the western side of the island. A key component of the DTSS Phase 2 is the Tuas Water Reclamation Plant (WRP), a new facility under design in the west of Singapore that Jacobs is leading the detailed design. When completed, the plant will treat 800,000 cubic meters of used water per day for reuse to meet both industrial and drinking water needs and be the largest membrane bioreactor facility in the world!
A first in Singapore, the Tuas WRP will be integrated with the National Environment Agency’s Integrated Waste Management Facility (IWMF), collectively known as the “Tuas Nexus.” Tuas Nexus is a first-in-the-world green-field development, which integrates two complex facilities to reap synergies of the water-energy-waste nexus, resulting in improved efficiencies.
For example, food waste received at the IWMF will be co-digested with used water sludge at Tuas WRP to increase the yield of biogas, which in turn is used at IWMF to improve steam quality and give rise to higher overall plant thermal efficiency. As such, Tuas Nexus will double energy recovered from used water and export more electricity to the national grid (estimated totals capable of powering to power up to 300,000 four-room apartments), while allowing both facilities energy self-sufficiency.
A zero energy facility, Tuas Nexus will be able to achieve overall carbon savings of more than 200,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions a year according to PUB. That’s the equivalent of removing 42,500 cars from the roads!
In October 2019, Tuas Nexus was named the “Most Innovative Water-Energy Nexus Project," at the biennial International Desalination Association (IDA) World Congress in Dubai – a globally-recognized event in the field of advanced water treatment specifically related to desalination and water reuse. Tuas WRP also received Bentley’s 2019 Year In Infrastructure top prize in water and wastewater treatment plants.