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.

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President Trump shakes hands with tech CEOs signing the Ratepayer Protection Pledge at the White House, with AI data centers symbolized in the background.
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Tech giants sign White House pledge to cover AI data center power costs amid backlash

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On March 4, 2026, leading tech firms including Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI signed the non-binding Ratepayer Protection Pledge at the White House, committing to fund new power generation and infrastructure for AI data centers to shield consumers from rising electricity bills. President Trump hailed it as a 'historic win,' but critics question its enforceability amid growing environmental and economic concerns.

A 2020 storm shut down Iowa's only nuclear power plant prematurely. Google now aims to reopen it to supply energy for nearby data centers. Concerns arise over extreme weather risks in tornado-prone areas.

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Google has signed a data center deal that includes a 20-year commitment to add new clean power. The project involves building a data center in Michigan.

Google has now received a building permit from Avesta municipality for a data center on its land in Horndal, valid for two years. Groundwork began in November 2025, but the company has not yet made a formal decision to build. Preparatory work will continue until August.

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Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren and Republican Senator Josh Hawley have called on the Energy Information Administration to require annual reporting on data center energy use. The bipartisan letter, sent on Thursday, aims to address the growing demands of artificial intelligence infrastructure. It highlights concerns over electricity costs for families amid expanding data centers.

Tesla has leased a 108,000-square-foot research and development facility in Fremont, California, expanding its presence near its main manufacturing hub. The deal, completed late last year, underscores the company's continued investment in the Bay Area despite relocating its headquarters to Texas. The facility will support office and R&D functions, though Tesla has not specified which business unit will occupy it.

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Tesla has announced Terafab, described as the largest chip manufacturing facility ever, in collaboration with SpaceX and xAI. The facility aims to produce 1TW of chips per year to support ambitious projects like solar-powered satellites and millions of Optimus robots. Elon Musk stated it requires thousands of acres and over 10GW of power.

 

 

 

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