What You Need to Know About Data Centers
Lawmakers and local officials are weighing moratoriums and zoning limits as 14 states study electricity demand, water use and community impacts.
- States and cities are moving to slow or halt new data center projects as demand for AI and cloud computing fuels a construction boom across the United States.
- Communities worry these facilities consume excessive electricity and water while creating few long-term jobs, despite companies promising massive investment and temporary construction employment.
- Lawmakers in 14 states have introduced proposals for moratoriums, while San Marcos recently approved a zoning change that effectively bans new data centers within city limits.
- Local leaders say these pauses provide time to draft zoning rules and evaluate potential impacts on power grids and water supplies before approving additional projects.
- As AI-related infrastructure continues expanding, the action faces potential legal challenges, even as some municipalities use zoning authority to regulate facility locations.
29 Articles
29 Articles
Data centers are reshaping communities across America. Here’s what you need to know
As companies race to build the infrastructure behind AI and the internet, communities are weighing new investment against questions about electricity, water and long-term costs.
What you need to know about data centers
As companies race to build the infrastructure behind AI and the internet, communities are weighing new investment against questions about electricity, water and long-term costs.
Why more communities are saying no to data centers
As demand for artificial intelligence and cloud computing continues to fuel a nationwide boom in data center construction, a growing number of states and local communities are moving to slow or temporarily halt new projects. Lawmakers and local officials say the pauses are intended to give governments time to study the impact these massive facilities could have on power grids, water supplies and surrounding neighborhoods before additional develo…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 89% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium










