It seems like I’m seeing articles almost every day about local pushback to the creation of new data centers. This sudden surge of antagonism seems to have caught the people who build data centers by surprise.
The following are just a few of the dozens of examples of communities that are skeptical or that don’t want new data centers:
- After public feedback, local elected officials in Peculiar, Missouri, passed an ordinance to block a $1.5 billion data center proposed by Diode Ventures.
- A $1.3 billion data center project was withdrawn from consideration in Chesterton, Indiana, following massive community pushback over environmental concerns.
- In Fauquier County, Virginia, residents successfully pressured Headwaters Site Development to withdraw a $400 million data center project.
- Residents of Prince George’s County, Maryland, persuaded elected officials to enact a six-month moratorium on data center construction in late 2025.
- The legislature of Maine passed a new law creating a moratorium on new data centers. While that was vetoed by the governor, the state push was not unique, and similar moratoriums have been discussed by the legislatures in Georgia, Oklahoma, and Vermont. Other legislatures, like Illinois and South Dakota, have scaled back tax incentives that were aimed at attracting new data centers.
It’s an interesting public debate. There are clearly some significant benefits from bringing a data center to a community.
- Job Creation. There is a big burst of economic benefit while a data center is being constructed. While most data centers bring fewer jobs than suggested by the data center owners, the jobs they bring have high salaries.
- Tax Base. Assuming that a community assesses them properly, a data center should bring a nice boost to property and other local taxes. The extreme example of this is in Loudoun County, Virginia, which is home to a huge number of data centers. In 2025, the data centers contributed $895 million in local taxes, which represented 95% of the entire County budget.
- Infrastructure Improvements. The infrastructure needed to support data centers can benefit the wider community if done right. Bringing a data center means new roads, an improved electric grid, modernized water infrastructure, and fiber optics.
The big public pushback comes because there are also downsides to data centers.
- Huge Users of Electricity. A traditional data center used for cloud services might use as much power as 25,000 homes. An AI data center of the same size might require enough electricity to power 100,000 homes. The new giant data center being built in Louisiana is expected to draw twice as much power as the entire City of New Orleans. Communities worry about higher electric prices, brownouts, and electric shortages.
- Huge Users of Water. Data centers generate a lot of heat. A chip used for AI consumes 700 to 1,000 watts each, compared to 150 – 300 watts used by a traditional chip used for cloud services. The huge use of power generates heat, so data centers must be cooled. An average AI data center might need up to five million gallons of water per day for cooling. Communities worry about the strain on water systems, particularly in parts of the country that see periodic droughts.
- Data Centers are Noisy. Data centers generate significant, continuous noise that typically ranges from 55 to 85 decibels. This is generally experienced by neighbors as constant, low-frequency humming, similar in volume to a vacuum cleaner. When backup diesel generators are used or tested, noise can grow to 110 decibels, which is equivalent to the noise generated by a rock concert.
- Air Pollution. Many data centers are generating their own electricity by constructing a power plant fueled by natural gas or other fossil fuels. Almost all data centers use diesel to power backup generators, and it’s not unusual for a hyperscale data center to have several hundred huge diesel generators. Neighbors say that living close to a data center is like living close to a traditional electric power plant in terms of air pollution.
- Electronics Waste. The high heat and constant usage for AI can burn out cards in less than two years. This means data centers generate a lot of electronic waste that includes significant amounts of toxic materials and heavy metals. Most local landfills are not prepared for a large quantity of this kind of waste.
- Require Large Plots of Land. Hyperscale data centers occupy a large plot of land that might otherwise be used for agriculture, residential housing, or industrial expansion. Since nobody wants to be a neighbor to a data center, there is also a larger circle around new data centers where others don’t want to build.
- Not Transparent. A surprising number of new data center developers are doing things like requiring local officials to sign NDAs before showing their full plans.
The growing distrust of new data centers is not universal, and many communities are actively seeking new data centers because of the benefits. But a growing number of communities are deciding that the downsides outweigh the benefits.







