Ecolab issued multi-year notes this week to finance its acquisition of CoolIT Systems, a privately held developer of liquid cooling solutions for data centers and high-performance computing environments. The St. Paul-based water treatment and hygiene giant did not disclose note size or maturity structure in public filings, though the issuance follows Ecolab's November announcement of the CoolIT deal. Financial terms of the acquisition remain undisclosed. CoolIT, based in Calgary, specializes in direct-to-chip liquid cooling systems that remove heat from GPU and CPU clusters in AI training facilities and hyperscale data centers.
The move extends Ecolab's existing data center water management footprint into thermal infrastructure. Ecolab already supplies cooling tower treatments, corrosion inhibitors, and closed-loop water systems to cloud providers and colocation operators. CoolIT's technology integrates at the rack level, circulating dielectric fluid through cold plates mounted directly onto processors. The acquisition adds hardware manufacturing and installation capabilities to Ecolab's chemical formulation business. Ecolab reported $3.2 billion in institutional segment revenue for the first nine months of 2024, which includes data center and healthcare verticals. The company has not broken out data center-specific revenue in recent earnings.
The timing reflects urgency in AI infrastructure build-out. NVIDIA shipped an estimated 3.76 million data center GPUs in 2024, with each H100 or H200 unit generating thermal loads exceeding 700 watts at full utilization. Air cooling cannot economically handle that density at hyperscale. Liquid cooling, by contrast, removes heat at the source and recirculates it through facility-level heat exchangers, reducing energy overhead by 20-30% compared to traditional CRAC systems. Ecolab's chemistry expertise positions it to offer integrated water treatment and thermal management contracts. The company already holds long-term service agreements with major cloud providers for cooling tower management. Adding liquid cooling hardware creates a natural upsell path and raises switching costs once systems are installed.
Allocators should watch Ecolab's institutional segment margins in Q1 and Q2 2025 earnings. CoolIT's hardware business likely carries lower gross margins than Ecolab's chemical formulations, which historically run above 50%. Integration costs and any inventory step-up from purchase accounting will flow through near-term results. The real test is whether Ecolab can cross-sell CoolIT systems into its existing data center customer base and secure multi-year service contracts that blend chemistry, hardware maintenance, and monitoring software. Watch also for competitor responses. Vertiv and Schneider Electric dominate the thermal management space but lack Ecolab's chemical treatment incumbency. If Ecolab bundles treatments with cooling infrastructure, it forces rivals to either acquire water chemistry capabilities or cede integrated contracts.
The bond issuance itself is a tell. Ecolab carried $7.8 billion in total debt as of September 30, 2024, with a net debt-to-EBITDA ratio near 2.4x. Tapping the note market rather than using cash or revolver capacity suggests management sees the CoolIT deal as the first in a series of data center infrastructure acquisitions. The company has $1.1 billion in cash on the balance sheet but prefers to preserve liquidity while rates remain elevated. Multi-year notes issued in early 2025 likely carry coupons in the 5.0-5.5% range for investment-grade paper, higher than Ecolab's legacy debt but acceptable for a strategic asset in a high-growth vertical. The structure implies confidence that CoolIT's earnings will cover interest expense within 18-24 months.