How unpopular are new data centers being designed to help train and run artificial intelligence models around the United States?
On Monday, six Florida organizations signed sent to Congress by more than 200 other groups calling for a national moratorium on approval and construction of such facilities.
A typical A.I.-focused data center consumes as much electricity as 100,000 households, but the larger ones under construction will consume 20 times as much, according to the
鈥淭o say that data centers are unpopular right now is probably an understatement, to say the least,鈥 admitted Dan Diorio, vice president for state policy for the Data Center Coalition, speaking beforethe Florida House Economic Infrastructure Committee Tuesday.
The industry has been 鈥渧ery responsive鈥 to that public perception, Diorio said, and it鈥檚 important to inform local communities where such facilities might be located that data centers provide 鈥渟ignificant job opportunities,鈥 specifically in the skilled trades such as electricians, plumbers, and HVAC technicians.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about education and it鈥檚 about communication and upfront, honest conversations,鈥 added Tiffany Cohen, VP with Florida Power & Light (FPL). 鈥淧eople want to be heard. The have valid concerns, and we need to address them.鈥
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FPL is the state鈥檚 largest investor-owned utility, servicing more than 6 million individual accounts comprising around 12 million Floridians. The company has said it welcomes data centers to its service areas and supports their development.
Under questioning from Rep. Linda Chaney, R-Pinellas County, Cohen told lawmakers that the Florida Public Service Commission recently approved two new tariffs that will require that 鈥渓arge load鈥 customers that create data centers in Florida to pay in advance for their expected energy costs, and not FPL鈥檚 ratepayers.
鈥淚nstead of our general body paying for that, customers have to pay for that upfront,鈥 Cohen told the committee.
鈥淚n return, as their load materializes on our system, we will give them a refund of that money. It鈥檚 a state law, we can鈥檛 change the law, but we will refund the money to them as their load materializes. So, it ensures that they show up and that the amount of power that they say they鈥檙e going to take from us, they actually do, but it also forces them to pay those costs upfront. Which has never been done before.鈥
Data centers use large amounts of water, primarily for cooling servers. But Diorio said new closed-loop cooling systems enable use of both recycled wastewater and fresh water, allowing water supplies to be used multiple times.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last week announced his proposal to protect Floridians from footing the bill for A.I. data centers and to empower local governments to reject their development in their communities. He wants to prohibit utilities from charging Florida residents to support hyperscale data center development, including electric, gas, and water utilities.
Tuesday鈥檚 committee hearing was the first of 14 the Florida House through Thursday to discuss AI use in different facets of the Sunshine State鈥檚 industries.
The letter sent to Congress this week calling for a national moratorium on data centers was organized by Food & Water Watch.
鈥淔loridians are facing some of the highest electricity bills in the country. The explosion of data centers driven by Big Tech鈥檚 greed represents an unprecedented threat to communities suffocating under a crushing affordability and climate crisis,鈥 said Brooke Ward, senior Florida organizer for that organization, in a written statement.
鈥淭he only acceptable action to protect people and the environment is to halt the expansion of this unnecessary, dangerous, and under-researched industry in order to determine the true depth of harm. Floridians simply cannot afford a reckless ask-for-forgiveness-and-correct-later approach.鈥
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