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Local regulators deny rezoning request for Pennsylvania data center development

The latest example of local opposition to the expansion of server warehouses in the U.S. is a county commission that denied Talen Energy's request on Tuesday to rezone hundreds of acres of land.

Residents in the surrounding communities had been protesting the project for months, voicing their concerns about the impact on the environment and the increase of power bills.

Talen said in a press release that it would continue to monitor the situation.

The company stated that it was grateful for the opportunity to have a continuing conversation with Montour County residents and leaders about the proposed project. This allows us to spend more time listening, incorporating feedback from the Commissioners and engaging with the community.

Local conflicts like the one in Montour are a problem for Big Tech and the power industry, who have invested hundreds of millions of dollars to build and power data centers which will be used by artificial intelligence technology.

Microsoft and Meta, among others, have pulled out of projects in the past year due to community opposition. Co-location is a method of locating data centers near power sources. Talen, which provides both nuclear and gas-fired energy, currently supplies electricity to an Amazon Data Center that is co-located in Pennsylvania near Talen’s Susquehanna Nuclear Power Plant.

Analysts at Capstone stated that "as is common after a rezoning request has been rejected, we expect Talen and Amazon?to either redouble their effort in Montour County or pursue another brownfield site somewhere else in Pennsylvania." Reporting by Laila KEARNEY in New York, Editing by Lincoln Feast.

(source: Reuters)