• gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOPM
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      vor 18 Minuten

      It’s actually pretty hard for a municipal government to block an entire industry. The legal process of doing so requires a temporary moratorium and study.

      In the early stages, this is literally what a local ban looks like.

      If this small town succeeds, they establish the model for other cities in Texas. They have already halted a $14 billion international project.

  • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOPM
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    vor 6 Stunden

    This just became the first city in Texas to block a major data center. It would have brought billions of dollars into the small city, but used 4.6 million gallons or water and sewer daily.

    The city’s leaders recognized the long term dangers and blocked it.

    • dan@upvote.au
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      vor 2 Stunden

      4.6 million gallons or water

      How does it consume this much water? I thought modern water cooling systems were all closed-loop systems?

    • gdog05@lemmy.world
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      vor 6 Stunden

      I’m curious as to how sites like this actually bring in money into a community, let alone billions. They bring their own construction crews, equipment and supplies, and when they’re done they hire like ten security guards. Not that I’m not happy with this current outcome. I feel it’s huge in light of everything. But that claim doesn’t feel right to me.

      • dan@upvote.au
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        vor 1 Stunde

        The companies actually buy a lot of equipment and supplies locally, and use local construction crews where possible (if there’s enough of them available in the area).

        One of the things that people are annoyed about with data centers is that even if the company does buy things locally, they often get exempted from sales tax. For example, Texas and Ohio exempt data center equipment purchases from sales tax, and Meta negotiated a 20-year exemption from sales tax for their big Hyperion campus in Louisiana.