AI’s Thirsty Giants: Land, Water, Power & the Data Center Boom in NC
Artificial intelligence is changing the world at a breathtaking pace. But behind every AI chatbot, cloud service, and streaming platform is something most people rarely think about: data centers.I sat down with AI expert Craig Reynolds to talk about why those facilities have become one of the most controversial development issues facing North Carolina.We started by clearing up a common misconception. The term "data center" covers everything from small server rooms and portable emergency-response units to enterprise facilities, shared colocation sites, and the massive hyperscale campuses that can cover hundreds of acres and consume enormous amounts of electricity and water. Craig argues that these very different types of facilities are often lumped together, even though much of the public concern is focused on hyperscale developments.Our conversation explored why communities across North Carolina are pushing back. We discussed the amount of land these projects require, the long-term impact on surrounding property, concerns about backup generators, fuel storage, and industrial infrastructure, as well as the strain hyperscale facilities can place on local power grids and water supplies.We also talked about how these facilities are cooled, comparing evaporative systems with closed-loop cooling, direct-to-chip technology, and immersion cooling. That led to a broader discussion about water use, why some residents question conservation restrictions when large industrial users continue operating, and who ultimately pays for the infrastructure needed to support rapid expansion. We also examined Senate Bill 730, proposed moratoriums on new hyperscale projects, and the debate over whether North Carolina would be better served by encouraging smaller, distributed edge data centers and manufacturing the technology here instead of building more massive campuses.Technology is evolving faster than public policy.The question is whether North Carolina can keep up while balancing economic development, infrastructure, and the concerns of the communities expected to host these projects.This is a conversation about artificial intelligence, energy, water, economic development, and the difficult decisions that come with building the digital infrastructure of the future.
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Tags:
#DataCenters #AIInfrastructure #NorthCarolina #Hyperscale #CraigReynolds #AIPodcast #TechPolicy #DataCenterControversy #NCEconomy #FutureOfAI