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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFYI: 🇺🇸 A massive data center campus in Fayetteville, Georgia, secretly drained nearly 30 million gallons of water bef
DulceBiatch
@BiatchDulce
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3h
FYI: 🇺🇸 A massive data center campus in Fayetteville, Georgia, secretly drained nearly 30 million gallons of water before residents noticed a drop in their own water pressure.
The "unaccounted-for" consumption has sparked a local firestorm:
Illegal Hookups: Utility investigators discovered two industrial water connections feeding the QTS campus that were either installed without permission or not linked to a billing account.
Massive Waste: The facility used enough water to fill 44 Olympic-size swimming pools, totaling $147,474 in retroactive charges that went unbilled for months.
Citizen Outrage: Residents in the Annelise Park subdivision were told to stop watering their lawns to conserve water while the data center, the county's #1 water consumer, was draining the system for free.
"Partnership" Over Penalties: Despite the breach, the county utility declined to fine the developer, calling the company a "partner" and citing a lack of staff to monitor the site.
Total Ban: In response to the scandal and ongoing drought conditions, the Fayetteville City Council voted last month to ban new data centers in every zoning district across the city.
The developer, owned by Blackstone, claims the high usage was for temporary construction, but local advocates argue the facility is "above the law" while the state faces severe wildfire risks.
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Takket
(23,778 posts)Matthew28
(1,882 posts)To be built on floating rafts on the ocean with solar on top. It needs to be over water and not sucking up fresh water near our cities.
I like tech and use a.i but these need to be over oceans far away from land.
NBachers
(19,552 posts)Matthew28
(1,882 posts)over the ocean is a perfect place for solar. We could simply put datacenters beneath some of them.
fujiyamasan
(1,988 posts)I dont know what success they had with it. An earlier effort by Microsoft failed, I believe and they scrapped the project.
I dont think they used solar, but the intention was to use the water for cooling purposes.
flvegan
(66,484 posts)the company a partner"
Time to check the county utility chiefs' bank accounts for deposits/transfers.
FormerOstrich
(2,893 posts)happened in Tuscon.
Here is an article about how they did an end run and used drinking water for dust abatement.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/5/8/800035668/community/tucson-shuts-off-water-supply-for-data-center/
RussBLib
(10,723 posts)Coming from billionaires? Most of them probably didnt get rich by playing by the rules.
https://russblib.blogspot.com/?m=1
dalton99a
(95,134 posts)Diraven
(1,941 posts)"This is why we need to shield AI companies from liability".
nuxvomica
(14,182 posts)Seriously, if it's as wonderful as they say, it should be able figure out how to reduce its own use of water and power. Otherwise, it might be just another expensive bright and shiny object.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(14,864 posts)Those things generate a continuous buzzing sound