Why North Texas Facilities Choose EnviroTech for Water Treatment
The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex is the fourth-largest metropolitan area in the United States, with 8.5 million residents and one of the most concentrated industrial bases in the southern United States. This density creates enormous demand for professional water management across virtually every industry vertical.
North Texas source water comes primarily from a network of surface reservoirs managed by the Tarrant Regional Water District and the North Texas Municipal Water District. Water hardness across the region typically ranges from 100 to 220 ppm depending on the specific supply blend, with seasonal fluctuations driven by reservoir levels and source water mixing. Facilities drawing from Lavon Lake or the East Fork system tend to see harder water than those supplied by western reservoirs. This variable hardness creates scaling challenges in cooling towers and boilers that require adaptive chemical programs — not static set-and-forget approaches.
The region’s industrial base spans aerospace and defense manufacturing in Arlington and Grand Prairie, corporate technology campuses in Plano and Richardson, food and beverage processing throughout the corridor, logistics and distribution operations anchored by DFW International Airport, and a growing concentration of data center facilities in Garland, Allen, and Frisco. Each of these sectors generates distinct water treatment requirements, from ultra-pure process water for semiconductor fabrication to heavy metals removal in machining wastewater.
All facilities in the DFW metroplex fall under TCEQ Region 4 (Dallas/Fort Worth), which oversees environmental compliance across Tarrant, Dallas, Denton, Collin, and surrounding counties. The region is also designated an ozone nonattainment area, which creates additional scrutiny on industrial operations and makes proactive compliance management especially valuable.