When Beverly Morris retired in 2016, she thought she had found her dream home - a peaceful stretch of rural Georgia, surrounded by trees and quiet. Today, it's anything but. Just 400 yards from her front porch in Fayette County sits a large, windowless building filled with servers, cables, and blinking lights.
It's a data center - one of many popping up across small-town America, and around the globe, to power everything from crypto currencies to artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT. "I can't live in my home with half of my home functioning and no water," Ms Morris says. "I can't drink the water."
She believes the construction of the center, which is owned by Meta (the parent company of Facebook), disrupted her private well, causing an excessive build-up of sediment. Ms Morris now hauls water in buckets to flush her toilet. She says she had to fix the plumbing in her kitchen to restore water pressure. But the water that comes of the tap still has residue in it. "I'm afraid to drink the water, but I still cook with it, and brush my teeth with it," says Morris. "Am I worried about it? Yes."
Naturally, Meta claims the two aren't connected. In a statement to the BBC, Meta said that "being a good neighbor is a priority." Of course, nobody believes that. The company commissioned a groundwater study to investigate Morris's concerns. To no one's surprise, the report said Meta's data center operation did "not adversely affect groundwater conditions in the area". In Ms Morris' estimation, there's no doubt, that the company has worn out its welcome as her neighbor. "This was my perfect spot," she says. "But it isn't anymore."
The growth in cloud computing, crypto currencies and artificial intelligence has driven the need for more and more data centers-- and with them, more complaints from nearby residents. The boom is being challenged by a rise in local activism - with $64bn in projects delayed or blocked nationwide, according to a report from pressure group Data Center Watch.
And the concerns aren't just about construction. It's also about water usage. Keeping those servers cool requires a lot of water. "These are very hot processors," Mark Mills of the National Center for Energy Analytics testified before Congress back in April. "It takes a lot of water to cool them down."
Many centers use evaporative cooling systems, where water absorbs heat and evaporates - similar to how sweat wicks away heat from our bodies. On hot days, a single facility can use millions of gallons. One study estimates that AI-driven data centers could consume 1.7 trillion gallons of water globally by 2027. Few places illustrate this tension more clearly than Georgia - one of the fastest-growing data center markets in the U.S. Its humid climate provides a natural and more cost-effective source of water for cooling data centers, making it attractive to developers. But that abundance may come at a cost.
Gordon Rogers is the executive director of Flint Riverkeeper, a non-profit advocacy group that monitors the health of Georgia's Flint River. He takes us to a creek downhill from a new construction site for a data center being built by Quality Technology Services (QTS). George Diets, a local volunteer, scoops up a sample of the water into a clear plastic bag. It's cloudy and brown. "It shouldn't be that color," he says. To him, this suggests sediment runoff - and possibly flocculants. These are chemicals used in construction to bind soil and prevent erosion, but if they escape into the water system, they can create sludge.
QTS says its data centers meet high environmental standards and bring millions in local tax revenue. While construction is often carried out by third-party contractors, local residents are the ones left to deal with the consequences. "They shouldn't be doing it," Rogers says. "A larger wealthier property owner does not have more property rights than a smaller, less wealthy property owner."
Tech giants say they are aware of the issues and are taking action. "Our goal is that by 2030, we'll be putting more water back into the watersheds and communities where we're operating data centers, than we're taking out," says Will Hewes, global water stewardship lead at Amazon Web Services (AWS), which runs more data centers than any other company globally. He says AWS is investing in projects like leak repairs, rainwater harvesting, and using treated wastewater for cooling. In Virginia, the company is working with farmers to reduce nutrient pollution in Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the US.
In South Africa and India - where AWS doesn't use water for cooling - the company is still investing in water access and quality initiatives. In the Americas, Hewes says, water is only used on about 10% of the hottest days each year. Still, the numbers add up. A single AI query - for example, a request to ChatGPT - can use about as much water as a small bottle you'd buy from the corner shop. Multiply that by billions of queries a day, and the scale becomes clear.
Prof Rajiv Garg teaches cloud computing at Emory University in Atlanta. He says these data centers aren't going away - if anything, they're becoming the backbone of modern life. "There's no turning back," Prof Garg says. But there is a path forward. The key, he argues, is long-term thinking: smarter cooling systems, rainwater harvesting, and more efficient infrastructure. In the short term, data centers will create "a huge strain", he admits. But the industry is starting to shift toward sustainability. And yet, that's little consolation to homeowners like Beverly Morris - stuck between yesterday's dream and tomorrow's infrastructure.
Data centers have become more than just an industry trend - they're now part of national policy. President Donald Trump recently vowed to build the largest AI infrastructure project in history, calling it "a future powered by American data". Back in Georgia, the sun beats down through thick humidity - a reminder of why the state is so attractive to data center developers. For locals, the future of tech is already here. And it's loud, thirsty, and sometimes hard to live next to. With the Trump administration seemingly intent on giving all the advantages to corporations and the wealthy (at the expense of regular folks) the outlook is bleak. And since the GOP continues to take a hard-line stance against any type of new regulations to protect everyday Americans against corporate interests, the only available strategy seems to be to resist the approval and construction of data centers near residential areas-- resist in any way possible.
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