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Palm Beach County postpones 200-acre 'Project Tango' AI data center after community outrage

The Palm Beach County commissioners voted unanimously, 7-0, to postpone the AI data center application for the April 23, 2026 zoning meeting and to give time for more impact studies, despite high demand from the community to terminate the project altogether.
Screenshot/Palm Beach County
The Palm Beach County commissioners voted unanimously, 7-0, to postpone the AI data center application for the April 23, 2026 zoning meeting and to give time for more impact studies, despite high demand from the community to terminate the project altogether.

Tensions ran high in Palm Beach County on Wednesday as commissioners met for a zoning hearing on the controversial 鈥溾 鈥 a proposed 200-acre hyperscale AI data-center complex planned near Loxahatchee and Wellington, in the western part of the county.

After hours of emotional public comment from more than 50 residents worried about nonstop low-frequency hums, heavy water consumption and long-term environmental impacts, commissioners ultimately hit the brakes.

The commissioners voted unanimously, 7-0, to postpone the data center application until the April 23, 2026, zoning meeting and to give time for more impact studies, despite high demand from the community to terminate the project altogether.

The project, which was originally approved in 2016 as a regular data-center 鈥 and not an AI facility 鈥 returned to the commission after developers requested an additional 64 acres, which prompted a new vote.

READ MORE: From TikTok to AI Art: Algorithms are splintering pop culture, changing how we connect and create

Its placement on the consent agenda 鈥 which is meant for quick, routine matters 鈥 rather than the regular agenda also sparked outrage from the community and even drew criticism from Commissioner Maria Sachs.

Sachs now suggests sending out 鈥渃ertified letters鈥 to get opinions from more community members 鈥 and she wants to wait to see how the state handles legislation surrounding AI data centers.

鈥淚 want to reject the whole application,鈥 Sachs added.

Sachs echoed widespread opposition to placing AI data centers near communities, aligning with statements made by Gov. Ron DeSantis. This month, DeSantis announced plans for a Florida 鈥淎I Bill of Rights鈥 and a companion bill on data centers, aiming to protect privacy, limit AI in insurance and regulate data center siting and costs.

Residents at the county meeting mentioned DeSantis鈥 positions on numerous occasions, leaning on potential statewide political support.

Victoria Doyle, a lawyer and Lake Worth Beach resident, said during public comment, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 agree with him [DeSantis] often, but he鈥檚 absolutely right.鈥

鈥淐onsumers are going to pay for this,鈥 she said.

Palm Beach County Commissioners met for a zoning hearing on the controversial 鈥淧roject Tango鈥 鈥 a proposed 200-acre hyperscale AI data-center complex planned near Loxahatchee and Wellington, in the Western part of the county.
Palm Beach County
Palm Beach County Commissioners met for a zoning hearing on the controversial 鈥淧roject Tango鈥 鈥 a proposed 200-acre hyperscale AI data-center complex planned near Loxahatchee and Wellington, in the Western part of the county.

Residents remain furious

Loxahatchee residents 鈥 especially those in the Arden community with its 2,500 homes, including families living near S. Brook Elementary 鈥 pushed back hard against the AI data center, citing expected noise from cooling towers, servers and diesel generators, along with heavy water use, pollution concerns and higher utility costs.

The health concerns surrounding these centers have been gaining steam nationally. A with nearly 4,000 signatures warned of health risks to children and environmental harm.

鈥淪hut it down,鈥 Arden resident Corey Kanterman told SA国际传谋. Kanterman is part of a team who led a petition against the project.

鈥娾漀o good comes of having an AI data center near you,鈥 he said. 鈥淧ut them in the location of least impact to the environment and people. This location is not it.鈥

PBA Holdings鈥 Project Tango would expand Loxahatchee鈥檚 Central Park Commerce Center to 202 acres, including a 1.8-million-square-foot AI data center and over 3 million square feet of total warehouse space.

Project manager Ernie Cox said a noise study is underway and water-cooling plans are still being finalized, touting billions for the local economy.

Recently, a from more than 200 environmental and political organizations called for members of Congress for a moratorium on data center construction.

Loxahatche community member Ben Brown told SA国际传谋 in a 鈥減erfect world, we want to obviously just have this recognized for what it is and completely stopped entirely.鈥

鈥淭hat would be a perfect scenario until the recommended and appropriate studies are done,鈥 he said.

Wilkine Brutus is the Palm Beach County Reporter for SA国际传谋. The award-winning journalist produces stories on topics surrounding local news, culture, art, politics and current affairs. Contact Wilkine at wbrutus@wlrnnews.org
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