Google eyes massive data center in southeast Nebraska

Documents indicate Google plans to operate one of the largest data centers in the United States in southeast Nebraska, powered by a Tenaska natural gas plant that could generate up to 3,000 megawatts. The project, which may incorporate carbon capture technology, hinges on a state bill allowing private power plants to connect to the public grid. Tenaska has secured options on over 2,600 acres for the site.

Landowner Rick Wheatley in Otoe County, east of Lincoln, recounted a visit from a Tenaska representative last fall. The rep initially mentioned assembling 2,000 acres near a gas pipeline for a power plant to serve an AI data center before describing it as a business park. Wheatley declined to sell his 80 acres, part of family farmland used for corn and soybeans. Since December, Tenaska has agreements for over 2,600 acres under two LLC names, per county deed records. Neither Google nor Tenaska responded to comment requests. Tallgrass Energy denied involvement, despite documents naming it for gas supply and carbon transport. The documents, shared at a January public power district meeting, outline a combined-cycle natural gas plant of 1,000 to 3,000 megawatts, potentially online by 2029. At the high end, it would exceed Nebraska's largest plant. Google already operates three data centers in the state and has invested over $3.5 billion since 2019, supporting 13,300 jobs from 2021 to 2023. The project ties to LB1261, proposed by Governor Jim Pillen, which Tenaska supports. It would let private plants over 1,000 megawatts for large customers connect to public grids and sell excess power. Kenny Zoeller of Pillen's office said discussions involved multiple companies and public power districts, not just this project. Public utilities like OPPD acknowledged potential impacts but cited nondisclosure agreements. State Senator Myron Dorn signed an option for his 80 acres in Gage County and filed a conflict disclosure last week before bill debate, stating it benefits all landowners. The bill passed its first vote. Yale professor Kenneth Gillingham called the scale unprecedented for U.S. carbon capture and storage.

Related Articles

Aerial view of TeraWulf's Kentucky AI data center site showcasing modern facilities in a rural setting.
Image generated by AI

TeraWulf acquires Kentucky site for 1 GW AI data center

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

TeraWulf announced the purchase of a Kentucky development site to support more than 1 gigawatt of AI and high-performance computing capacity. The bitcoin miner turned infrastructure developer saw its stock rise 13 percent following the news.

The Nebraska Public Power District has identified four communities as possible locations for a new nuclear power plant. Local residents in the areas appear largely supportive, in contrast to past opposition to wind and solar projects.

Reported by AI

Otoe County officials voted last month to suspend permits for new data centers for as long as one year. The move follows resident concerns about water use, electricity costs, and potential heat impacts from the facilities.

Permits for 11 natural gas-powered data centers across the United States project annual greenhouse gas emissions exceeding 129 million tons—more than Morocco released in 2024. Linked to AI companies OpenAI, Meta, Microsoft, and xAI, these facilities underscore the fossil fuel reliance in the data center boom fueling AI expansion, according to a WIRED review of air permit documents.

Reported by AI

Google has broken ground on its first Swedish datacenter in Horndal outside Avesta. The company promises thousands of jobs during construction and 100 permanent positions when the facility is ready in 2028.

Tesla is constructing a $250 million battery energy storage system using Megapack units in Reno, Nevada. The facility will include 256 units arranged in 16 clusters. Sawyer Merritt first reported the project on April 3, 2026.

Reported by AI

Activists gathered outside the Microsoft Build conference in San Francisco this week to voice concerns about the environmental impact of AI data centers. They distributed leaflets detailing effects on land, water and power resources. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella addressed community concerns during his keynote address on Tuesday.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline