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Maine approves the first US moratorium against big data centers

Maine lawmakers passed a bill which 'could be the first U.S. State to impose a moratorium on the construction of new data centers.

The bill still requires the final approval of Democratic Governor Janet Mills. It would freeze approvals until October 2027 for data centers that require more than 20 megawatts. A state-appointed council will then analyze their impact on local grids, electricity bills, and?air?and water.

The bill was passed by the House with a vote of 79 to 62 and cleared the Senate later that same day 21-13. The Governor Mills office did not respond immediately to a Tuesday request for comments.

Mills has insisted on an exception for a smaller project that is?underdevelopment, and which reuses existing infrastructure that wouldn't have a significant impact on the electricity grid or energy costs.

Maine will be a test-case for other states who have been discussing similar measures. As of now, 11 states have considered legislation to halt or restrict data center development.

After a strong backlash from Big Tech companies against their proposals for data centers, the Trump Administration last month had these companies sign a voluntary pledge that they would pay?the cost?of?new electricity production to power their data centres.

The question of how to deal with the explosion of data centers is not a partisan issue. Two 'Democratic' lawmakers, Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, introduced legislation last month to stop all construction of data?centers unless Congress passes legislation on AI?safety.

Republican Senator Josh Hawley from?Missouri, and Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal also introduced legislation aimed to protect ratepayers against data-center related energy bill spikes. (Reporting from Valerie Volcovici and Aditya soni in Washington; editing by Pooja desai).

(source: Reuters)