This looks like a solar panel, but it’s really a water tap, one that needs no pipe, no grid, no connection to anything, and still pours out enough clean, mineralized water for two people, all year long. Unless it’s freezing, or too cloudy, or raining too hard, or the unit just breaks. SOURCE Global built that machine, called it a Hydropanel, and convinced Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, BlackRock and Microsoft to pour roughly $270 million into it. That makes SOURCE one of the three most-funded water-tech companies there has ever been, by my count in my Leviathan database. And then, in about twelve months, it went quiet and died. So what actually kills a company that raised that much, from investors that smart? Three things, mostly: it ran out of cash and couldn’t raise more, its panels started breaking faster than it could fix them, and the pivot meant to save it came too late. Let me walk you through how.
What did SOURCE Global actually build?
So let’s start with the machine, because it really is a beautiful idea. A Hydropanel is a solar-powered box that pulls water vapour out of the air, condenses it into liquid, and mineralizes it into drinking water, with no connection to a grid or a pipe. That’s atmospheric water generation, AWG for short: making water from thin air. The company behind it was founded in 2014 in Arizona as Zero Mass Water, and renamed SOURCE Global in 2020. Its founder, Cody Friesen, is an MIT-trained materials scientist who collected just about every innovation prize going, from MIT’s Innovators Under 35 to the Lemelson-MIT Prize. And when I rank every water-tech company by the funding I’ve logged in my Leviathan database, SOURCE comes in third, behind only Gradiant and Lilac Solutions. It’s the only company in that top tier that’s now dead.
Raising $270 million was the easy part
Here’s the thing about fundraising milestones: they get cheered as proof a company is winning, but they’re really just proof it needed cash. No founder gives up equity for fun. The way I think about it, venture money is nitro for your engine: you use it to grow faster than you naturally can, while hoping the car doesn’t explode before you’ve finished building it. SOURCE strapped on four bottles of nitro. It raised about $22 million in a Series A in early 2018 (a startup’s first big institutional round), another $20 million in a Series B the same year, $50 million in a Series C in 2020 led by BlackRock, and then the big one, a $130 million Series D in 2022 led by Bill Gates’ Breakthrough Energy Ventures. Each later round is a bet on the last one’s promise paying off. So the real story of SOURCE isn’t the money. It’s the promises that money was bought with, and whether they came true.
The full funding ladder (disclosed rounds)
| Round | Date | Amount (US$) | Lead investor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Series A + B | Oct 2018 | ~$43.8M | Breakthrough Energy Ventures |
| Series C | Jun 2020 | $50.0M | BlackRock |
| Series D | Jul 2022 | $130.0M | Breakthrough Energy Ventures |
| Total disclosed equity | $223.8M | ||
Did the technology actually work?
For a while, genuinely, yes. The first promise, back in 2018, was to “leapfrog infrastructure just as cell phones do”: if piping water to people is too expensive, decentralize it instead, and bring it straight to whoever needs it. And SOURCE delivered the proof. It donated Hydropanels to Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, dropped them in the middle of nowhere in Australia and Syria, put them on pediatric wards in Jamaica. It closed that first funding cycle with a bold rollout in Neom, Saudi Arabia, and later deployed across the Navajo Nation, the Philippines and Colombia, reaching references in 54 countries. Nobody expected those panels to be cheap or eternal yet; they expected a proof of concept, and then a proof of market, and they got both. Then, on my own podcast microphone in 2022, SOURCE made the promise that would come to haunt it.
Our goal is to become by far and away the cheapest source of potable water on the planet, no matter which market we’re talking about.
The Hydropanels couldn’t survive the field
To chase “the cheapest water on Earth,” SOURCE had to cut costs, hard. So it built a 400-person plant in Penang, Malaysia, and moved to as many cheap parts and materials as it could. The trouble is that making cheap parts that still work is its own skill, and from the former employees I heard from on both sides of the Pacific, that didn’t go smoothly: constant plan changes, indecision from the top, and at the Malaysian facility, a churn of layoffs and rehires that wrecked consistency. Quality slid. The most documented case is Allensworth, California, where panels bought to fix arsenic-tainted groundwater ended up sitting broken in people’s yards. But here’s what makes it sting: just a couple of years earlier, on that same microphone, SOURCE had promised those panels would last two decades.
The Hydropanels that we are making and releasing now have a 20-year lifespan… We are not satisfied with 20 years. We will go beyond that.
How long do SOURCE Hydropanels actually last?
Not twenty years. That was the marketing. Quietly, a couple of years later, SOURCE walked the commitment back to five years of support. And in the field, plenty didn’t even make that: in 2024, the local outlet SJV Water reported that in Allensworth, two years in, many residents had pulled the Hydropanels out of their yards because they’d stopped working and were just taking up space, with the maintenance crew, in the company’s own words, thinned by “high turnover.” It’s worth remembering that as far back as 2018, the YouTuber Thunderfoot had done the brutal arithmetic in a video literally titled “Zero Mass Water busted”: at around $4,500 for two rooftop panels, you could have a tanker truck haul you the same water from the other side of the country over the panels’ lifetime, and still pay five times less.
What were the warning signs the money was running out?
The first tell wasn’t a press release. It was silence. SOURCE’s backers have famously deep pockets, Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Microsoft’s Climate Innovation Fund, BlackRock, so when they declined to throw in a bridge (a small, short-term top-up, usually at the last round’s price, from investors you already have), that alone said something. Then the rumour started going around the small world of water investors that SOURCE was raising a down round: new money at a lower valuation than before, which dilutes and devalues the existing investors twice over, and which usually either closes within weeks or never closes at all. For months, it was crickets. Then, in April 2025, an SEC filing surfaced showing SOURCE trying to raise $75 million and having sold just $19.3 million of it. The name at the top of that filing wasn’t Cody Friesen. He’d vanished from the document entirely. I reached out to him at the time, and didn’t hear back.
Why did a water-from-air company start canning water?
This is the part that sounds insane until it doesn’t. In 2023, SOURCE bought Proud Source Water, a bottled-spring-water brand, and launched Sky Water: canned water made from its Hydropanels. A company that had spent years arguing bottled water was the problem was now… selling cans of water. But it’s a page straight out of the Xerox playbook. When the Xerox 914 copier proved too expensive to sell in the 1960s, Xerox stopped selling the machine and started leasing it, charging per copy; customers bought the output, not the hardware. Selling canned Hydropanel water could, in theory, do the same: create steady volume for the factories while the panels stayed in SOURCE’s own hands. The problem is that beverages are brutal: by industry counts, 90% of beverage startups fail within two years, and the move needed marketing cash SOURCE no longer had.
So is SOURCE finally, fully dead?
By my read, effectively yes. SOURCE posted to LinkedIn near-daily, then stopped dead on the 27th of February 2025; my own liveness scoring in the Leviathan database flags that as a silence ratio of nearly 200 against a critical threshold of ten, and scores the company dead at 0.90 confidence. The executives updated their profiles to “open to work” through the spring, the products went out of stock, and source.co quietly carried on as a Shopify storefront on autopilot. The one apparent survivor was Proud Source Water, still selling, seemingly near breakeven, the closest the SOURCE empire ever got to profitability. Then, after I published this story, readers from Mackay, Idaho, where Proud Source bottles its water, wrote to tell me that plant had closed too. I haven’t been able to confirm it independently, and public listings still show the brand active, so treat it as a developing thread, not a settled fact. But if it’s true, even the lifeboat sank.
SOURCE’s death doesn’t doom atmospheric water generation
It’s tempting to read it the other way, that the best-funded one died so the rest are doomed, but the data says otherwise, and I dug into exactly this in my newsletter follow-up to the episode. By my count, since SOURCE raised its Series A in 2018, seventeen other AWG companies have raised growth-stage money, roughly $120 million between them, and nine of those raised in 2025 alone, backed by genuinely water-savvy investors like Burnt Island Ventures and Echo River Capital. The difference is that they mostly avoid SOURCE’s original sin. You can make water from air, you can do it fully off-grid, and you can sell it cheaply to consumers, but you only get to pick two of those three. SOURCE tried for all three at once. The others picked their two.
Was SOURCE a scam?
Also no, and the distinction matters. A scam is Theranos: Elizabeth Holmes went to prison because she *knowingly* deceived. SOURCE’s loudest critics were never hidden, Christopher Gasson at Global Water Intelligence called it an “egregious waste of money” in print, and the analyst Rhys Owen said flatly that it was overvalued, both of them one Google search or one phone call away from any investor doing diligence. What actually fooled people was subtler, and almost poetic: the Hydropanel looked like a solar panel, so investors assumed solar’s plummeting cost curve would apply to it too. It won’t. There are hard thermodynamic floors on pulling water from air that no amount of scale erases. SOURCE, in the end, confused thermodynamics with a religion.
What should a water investor take away from this?
Not a witch hunt. The temptation after a failure this loud is to start hunting for the next dodgy water-tech, and I’d push back on that. Water entrepreneurship is, frankly, an unreasonable endeavour, and if you leave it only to cautious water engineers (like me), you get nothing but incremental improvement, which at the scale of today’s water problems may simply not be enough. The lesson of SOURCE isn’t “stop dreaming.” It’s “dream rooted in the physics, not in spite of it.” Cody Friesen says a builder’s gotta build, and he’s already onto something new, so I’ll be watching for it. For the full story, the failures and the people who reached out after, listen to the episode below, and if you want more of my water-tech post-mortems, subscribe to my newsletter.
Frequently asked questions
What does SOURCE Global do?
SOURCE Global makes solar-powered Hydropanels that pull water vapour from the air and mineralize it into drinking water, with no grid or plumbing connection. Founded in 2014 in Arizona as Zero Mass Water and renamed in 2020, it raised roughly $270 million but is now effectively defunct.
Who is the CEO of SOURCE Global?
Founder Cody Friesen, a materials scientist trained at MIT, led SOURCE until early 2025. Bill Witz took over as CEO in March 2025, and Friesen publicly announced he had left the company in June 2025.
Is SOURCE Global publicly traded?
No. SOURCE Global is a private company (a Public Benefit Corporation). Its last major raise was a 2022 Series D; an April 2025 SEC filing sought $75 million but had sold only $19.3 million.
How long do SOURCE Hydropanels last?
SOURCE originally marketed a lifespan of up to 20 years, then quietly reduced its commitment to 5 years of support. In the field, many units failed within two to three years, with reports of broken fans, dead batteries, and absent maintenance.
Is SOURCE Global still in business?
Barely. Its LinkedIn has been silent since February 2025, its products are out of stock, and its leadership has departed; my liveness scoring rates the company dead at 0.90 confidence. Its acquired brand Proud Source Water remained active, though one unconfirmed reader report says its Mackay, Idaho plant has since closed.
Sources
- SEC EDGAR, Form D, SOURCE GLOBAL, PBC (CIK 0001644099), filed 3 April 2025. sec.gov
- SJV Water, “Allensworth residents feel abandoned by company that makes water out of thin air,” 2024. sjvwater.org
- Business Wire, “SOURCE Global, PBC… Raises More Than $130 Million,” 19 July 2022. businesswire.com
- CNBC, “Bill Gates and Blackrock backing Source Global, maker of hydropanels,” 28 March 2022. cnbc.com
- Thunderf00t, “Zero Mass Water BUSTED,” YouTube, 2018. youtube.com