Rural US communities resist data center expansion

Residents in rural areas across the United States are opposing new data center projects over concerns about water supplies, energy costs, and farmland loss. In Tazewell County, Illinois, locals successfully blocked a proposed facility after packed council meetings and petitions. The backlash highlights tensions between AI infrastructure growth and agricultural needs.

Michael Deppert, a farmer and president of the Tazewell County Farm Bureau, feared a data center eight miles from his fields would drain a shared aquifer, threatening irrigation for pumpkins, corn, and soybeans. Residents packed city council meetings and gathered petitions, leading developer Western Hospitality Partners to scrap the project. Deppert said, “You just can’t lay down and let everybody do whatever they wish.” Similar resistance has emerged in states from Illinois to West Virginia and Indiana, where opposition includes threats like shots fired at a lawmaker's home with a note reading “no data centers.” In Texas, Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller warned against data centers on prime farmland, calling it a threat to food supplies. Data centers are shifting to rural areas for cheap land and tax breaks, with 67 percent of planned facilities in such locations, per Pew Research Center. More than 160 new AI-focused centers have been built in the US over the past three years, a 70 percent increase, according to Bloomberg data. Miquel Vila of Data Center Watch noted, “Rural communities have become a target.” While some farmers like Jamie Walters near DeKalb, Illinois, welcome leases for solar power and data center support, others lament rising land prices that hinder expansion. Water and energy strains worry many: two-fifths of US data centers are in high water-stress areas, and they could consume billions of gallons annually by 2028, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory researchers forecast. In DeKalb, Meta's facility uses up to 1.2 million gallons daily, though averages are lower, Mayor Cohen Barnes said, crediting it for school funding via property taxes.

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Protesters blocking data center construction sites across the United States in 2026.
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Protests block 130 billion dollars in data center projects in early 2026

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Communities across the United States blocked or delayed at least 75 data center projects worth about 130 billion dollars from January through March 2026. Researchers described the period as the most blocked and delayed on record since tracking began in 2023. The opposition reflects a structural shift in local resistance to such developments.

Opposition to large data centers is emerging across party lines in several states. Recent moves by governors in Texas and New York highlight the trend. Local votes and polling show broad public resistance.

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A new Gallup survey reveals that 71 percent of Americans oppose the construction of AI data centers in their communities. The poll highlights widespread concerns about the facilities' heavy demands on electricity and water.

The Maine House and Senate approved LD 307 this week, imposing a moratorium on new data centers requiring 20 megawatts or more until at least October 2027. The bill, which prohibits state and local approvals for such facilities, now awaits action from Gov. Janet Mills amid national concerns over surging energy demands from AI infrastructure.

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California Resources Corporation has unveiled plans for a large data center campus in an active oil field in the state's Central Valley. The project aims to leverage existing infrastructure to minimize community opposition. Environmental groups have raised concerns about increased emissions.

Four new major data centres in Cape Town are set to consume the equivalent of 34% of the city's current maximum electricity demand, raising sustainability concerns. Civil society groups have objected to Equinix's proposals over lacks in information on water, emissions and diesel generators. The city and Equinix responded that impacts are manageable.

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