--- title: "\"The situation has escalated rapidly,\" within just three months, 8 projects have been stalled and 9 projects have been delayed! The American public is \"resisting\" the data center frenzy" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/266116423.md" description: "Data shows that from March to June 2025, opposition from American communities led to the blocking or delaying of data center projects valued at $98 billion, far exceeding the previous total of $64 billion over nearly a year. This resistance sentiment is crossing party lines, with project delays occurring in Democratic-led Virginia as well as Republican strongholds Indiana and Kentucky. However, the current investment enthusiasm driven by AI among tech giants remains unabated" datetime: "2025-11-17T04:11:24.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/266116423.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/266116423.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/266116423.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/266116423.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/266116423.md) # "The situation has escalated rapidly," within just three months, 8 projects have been stalled and 9 projects have been delayed! The American public is "resisting" the data center frenzy From the suburbs of Virginia to the towns of Georgia... a "resistance" movement ignited by soaring electricity costs and resource concerns is impacting billion-dollar data center construction plans across the United States. According to a recent report released last week by Data Center Watch, a project under AI security company 10a Labs, the situation is "escalating rapidly." The report shows that in just three months from March to June 2025, community opposition across the country led to the complete halt of 8 data center projects, with another 9 projects forced to delay, involving a total investment of up to $98 billion. This figure has surpassed the $64 billion total tracked by the project over nearly a year from May 2024 to March 2025. The political implications of this trend are becoming increasingly clear. In Georgia, Democrat Peter Hubbard was successfully elected to the state Public Service Commission, thanks to his sharp criticism of high electricity costs and the unchecked expansion of data centers, marking the first time in nearly two decades that the party has won a statewide office in the state. Despite local resistance, the tech giants' investment enthusiasm driven by artificial intelligence remains undiminished. This has intensified the conflict between large-scale capital deployment and community interests. ## **Data Reveals Escalating Community Resistance** The report from Data Center Watch quantifies the intensity of this wave of opposition by tracking public sources such as news reports, legal documents, and social media. Report author Miquel Vila noted that this could be a "turning point," **indicating that community opposition has shifted from an occasional event to a likely norm in project development.** The report emphasizes that during the period from March to June alone, nearly 50,000 signatures were collected on petitions opposing specific data centers. One of the most notable cases occurred in the suburbs of Atlanta, where local officials approved a 180-day moratorium on a $17 billion large data center development plan under immense public pressure in May. Miquel Vila stated: **"Previously, (resistance) was something that happened occasionally. Now it seems that when you develop a data center, it is very likely that someone will organize opposition."** ## **Electricity Costs as a Political Catalyst** Concerns over electricity costs are the core driving force behind the resistance. In Georgia, newly elected Peter Hubbard made it clear: **"The primary issue is (energy) affordability, but closely following is the concern that data centers deplete water, electricity, and land without paying corresponding taxes."** A similar situation is unfolding in Virginia. According to WIRED, the state's governor-elect Abigail Spanberger stated during her campaign that she hoped data centers would "pay for the electricity they consume." State legislator Josh Thomas, representing Loudoun County, one of the most densely populated areas for data centers globally, said that the issue of data center expansion dominated his recent campaign. A large project in his district, named "Prince William Digital Gateway," sparked controversy for planning over 30 data centers near a national protected area, and a homeowners' group successfully paused the project through litigation in August ## **A Bipartisan Movement is Forming** Opposition to data centers is not limited to Democratic districts. A report from Data Center Watch indicates that the dissent has spread across red, blue, and purple states. In Republican strongholds like Indiana and Kentucky, projects have been halted earlier this year. At the federal level, some Republicans, including Senator Josh Hawley and Representatives Thomas Massie and Marjorie Taylor Greene, have become vocal critics of the issue, contrasting with Trump's push for rapid development. On November 7, Marjorie Taylor Greene urged the public via social media platform X to pay attention to local government approvals for data centers and "demand protection for your water and energy bills." According to climate publication Heatmap, polls show that less than half of Americans, regardless of political affiliation, are willing to support the construction of data centers in their communities. ## **The Paradox of Industry Silence and Accelerated Investment** In the face of rising opposition, major tech companies driving this wave of infrastructure development have largely remained silent, with many projects protected by confidentiality agreements during the site selection and construction phases. Dan Diorio, Vice President of the industry organization "Data Center Coalition," stated in a release that the industry still sees "strong interest" from communities nationwide, with its members committed to "ongoing community engagement and stakeholder education." He emphasized that data centers created significant economic benefits in 2023, supporting 4.7 million jobs and contributing $162 billion in federal, state, and local taxes. However, the scale of capital deployment in the industry far exceeds the amount of currently stalled projects. **For example, Meta announced last week that it plans to invest $600 billion over the next three years in artificial intelligence infrastructure, including data centers. 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