The Race to Build AI Data Centers -- Before the People Can Protest [View all]
https://theintercept.com/2026/05/29/ai-data-centers-water/From Utah to Georgia, communities are demanding data center moratoriums as concerns move from local zoning fights into national politics.
The Intercept Briefing
May 29 2026, 6:00 a.m.
Shark Tanks Kevin OLeary has been making the media rounds defending the 40,000-acre data center project hes backing in northern Utah. Dismissing residents
concerns over the environmental impacts and water demands of the proposed project in the drought-stricken Great Salt Lake region, OLeary has claimed protesters are
bused in,
misinformed, and alleged that
China has had a hand in orchestrating the public push back.
The Stratos project in Utah is an example of data center largesse, says Jim Walsh, the policy director of
Food and Water Watch, an organization leading a campaign to stop the rapid development of data centers across the country. As proposed, the project would be more than double the size of Manhattan. Walsh adds, Its important to recognize that the impacts of this data center go beyond the water and energy concerns that impact the residents of Salt Lake. Theyre going to be pulling gas from the
Ruby Pipeline, and this project is going to perpetuate more
fracking in the Western U.S., a practice for extracting natural gas that uses extreme amounts of water.
This week on The Intercept Briefing, host Jordan Uhl speaks to Walsh about the massive Utah project, the environmental and economic impact of data centers on communities especially where water is already scarce, and the Trump administrations push to cut regulations at the federal and local level to accelerate the build-out of data centers and AI infrastructure.
In response to OLeary claiming data center development is a national security priority to beat out China in the AI race, Walsh says, National security isnt just about having technological and military superiority. Were not safe if we dont have clean air and clean water to drink and breathe. Were not safe if our communities have massive data centers that are extracting our natural resources. Our entire economy functions on access to water.