Data centers — those big, secretive, windowless warehouses packed with IT infrastructure and almost no humans — are popping up quickly throughout the country.
Why it matters: Whenever you join a Zoom meeting, save photos to the cloud or stream Netflix, you're depending on a data center.
The server farms store our information. The electrical equipment gets hot, requiring constant cooling that uses millions of gallons of water annually.
What they're saying: Communities are worried about noise, aesthetics, and potentially higher electricity bills because these centers require as much power as a small city.
Data centers could consume up to 12% of U.S. electricity by 2028, according to the Department of Energy.
AREP's data center in University City uses 1.2 million gallons of water per day, according to a City of Charlotte presentation. To compare, all of Charlotte Water's customers use 11 million gallons per day total.
By the numbers: Nearly 3,000 new data centers were under construction or planned across the U.S. by late last year, Axios previously reported.
That's in addition to the more than 4,000 already up and running.