Communities are fighting the wrong villain
By Futurist Thomas Frey
Drive past a proposed data center site in almost any growing metro area right now, and you’ll likely see a yard sign. Sometimes a whole street of them. “Not in my backyard.” “Protect our water.” “Stop the server farm.” The opposition is loud, organized, and understandable — nobody signed up to live next to a windowless building the size of an airport hangar that hums through the night and draws power like a small city.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody’s putting on a yard sign: the data center isn’t the threat to your community. The shortage of data centers is.
I’ve spent my career watching communities fight the visible thing while the invisible thing quietly does the real damage. This is a textbook case. Right now, across the U.S. and Europe, data center capacity is falling behind demand — not because we’re building too many, but because we’re not building nearly enough, fast enough, in the right places. Gartner projects that 40% of AI data centers will be power-constrained by 2027. Nearly half of all global data center projects scheduled for completion this year are already facing delays tied directly to power and grid limitations. In the U.S. alone, roughly 2,300 gigawatts of generation and storage capacity are stuck sitting in interconnection queues — more capacity than the country’s entire installed power grid currently provides.
That’s not a story about too much infrastructure. That’s a story about a civilization running out of the infrastructure it already depends on.
Continue reading… “The Real Threat Isn’t the Data Center. It’s the Shortage.”