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Arizona Data Center Intel

Latest data center news, projects, power and policy across Arizona — updated daily.

Recent Arizona data center news

  • Aurora Journal launches private digital journaling platform

    Aurora Journal has launched a secure, on-device digital journaling platform emphasizing user privacy and sustainable infrastructure.

    • Main announcement: Aurora Journal has released an encrypted, zero-knowledge on-device journaling platform that performs advanced text analytics locally on the user’s hardware and is positioned as an educational (not clinical) tool for psychological frameworks such as Cognitive Behavioural Theory and Acceptance and Commitment Theory; the company is offering discounts for students and military and financial aid for users facing hardship.
    • Background and infrastructure details: The organisation disclosed its primary data processing facility is located in Dallas and operates on a power grid that is 94% carbon-neutral (sourced from wind and solar across Texas) and uses waterless thermal management leveraging atmospheric currents; the company withheld user-acquisition targets and financial metrics during the launch.
  • Renewable energy advocates make gains in fight over future of big Arizona power utility

    The Salt River Project board election resulted in renewable energy advocates winning two seats, shifting voting control on key utility decisions.

    • Main outcome: The clean energy slate picked up two seats on the 14-member Salt River Project board, giving them an 8-to-6 majority in board votes that come before the full board, though incumbents retained the president and vice president offices.
    • Context and details: The utility projects it needs to double power capacity within a decade amid rising household electricity prices and heavy demand from a data center hot spot; the clean energy slate has previously voted against major natural gas projects and a rate increase last year, and the contest drew outside attention from Turning Point Action, which labeled the advocates “radical environmentalists.”
  • International Design Firm Opens Scottsdale Office amidst Growing Valley Demand

    SSOE Group has established a new office in Phoenix, Arizona.

    • New Phoenix office established: SSOE Group has opened a formal Phoenix office located at 16220 N. Scottsdale Rd., Suite 150, Scottsdale, AZ, formalizing a long-standing presence with more than 60 multi-discipline employees locally and ongoing local hiring to support sustained regional demand. Jennifer Willard, Principal, is based in Phoenix to lead the multi-discipline team serving the firm’s markets.
    • Scope and background: The office will support projects across advanced manufacturing, industrial sectors (automotive, battery, chemical, food and beverage, glass, pharmaceutical), community facilities (K-12, higher education, healthcare, judicial buildings, workforce centers, corporate and mixed-use environments), and digital infrastructure including data centers; SSOE emphasizes integrated expertise in process-driven facilities and architecturally driven environments focused on high-performance and long-term efficiency in the Southwest.
  • States Race to Win the Tech Economy in 2026 State of the State Addresses

    Broadband and technology were prioritized across nearly 30 governors’ 2026 State of the State addresses.

    • Main announcement: Governors across the country emphasized broadband expansion, AI policy and workforce development, and data center/energy planning; specific claims include Maine reporting “more than a quarter million homes and businesses” served, Wisconsin reporting 410,000 businesses and households with new or improved internet, Kansas connecting 117,000 households and businesses, and the Virgin Islands reporting a territory-wide internet program with over 50,000 users per month. The addresses also included concrete funding and contract figures: Maryland announced a $4 million AI workforce training investment, and South Dakota cited a $35 million Department of Defense contract for warhead production.
    • Background and other details: Governors described partnerships and policy actions: Maryland cited collaborations with Bloomberg Philanthropies, Microsoft, a South Korean biotech firm, and AstraZeneca for AI work; Iowa cited partnerships with Amazon Web Services and Google Public Sector to modernize state systems; several governors (Indiana, New York, Nebraska) debated who should shoulder data center energy costs or accelerate permitting; some states (New Hampshire, Delaware, South Carolina) signaled nuclear energy pathways and DOE engagement. Implementation timelines are those stated in addresses (2026) and referenced ongoing programs and contracts (e.g., South Dakota’s $35 million DoD contract already awarded).
  • New Data Center Developments: April 2026

    Data Center Knowledge published a monthly roundup of global data center developments and investments.

    • Key highlights and announced projects: The roundup summarizes multiple announced projects and financing moves, including Moody’s projection of ~$700 billion hyperscaler capex in 2026, Crusoe’s 900 MW AI data center in Abilene, West Texas (to support Microsoft workloads), Meta’s revised $10 billion investment targeting 1 GW capacity in El Paso with a planned 2028 launch, Penzance Management’s planned $4 billion investment for a 600 MW High Impact Intelligence Center in West Virginia, Aligned Data Centers’ $2.58 billion credit facility for US expansion, Digital Edge’s $665 million green loan for phase I of a 500 MW Bekasi campus, Pure DC’s 110 MW microgrid in Dublin, Prime Data Centers’ €6 billion campus plan for 550 MW, and Datagrid’s approval for a 280 MW hyperscale campus in New Zealand.
    • Context and supporting details: The article emphasizes energy and grid constraints and on-site/clean power solutions (e.g., Google + AES onsite clean energy, Concord New Energy + Bridge Data Centers barge-based hydrogen plant, Pure DC microgrid), highlights subsector partnerships (EdgeConneX + Kilimo water-efficiency program; MANTA consortium selecting MDC Data Centers for two cable landing hubs in Mexico), notes regional regulatory shifts (Australia’s new approval framework tying data center approvals to energy/resource commitments), and provides firm-level capital and timeline details where stated (e.g., Meta 2028 launch; Vietnam 200 MW AI data center construction starting end of April).
  • Data Centers in the Desert: W(h)ater You Worried About?

    Gensler’s sustainability director Kaley Joseph outlines that water stewardship has become a core design expectation for data center development in the Phoenix region.

    • Main announcement/action: Gensler (via Kaley Joseph) argues that water stewardship is now a core design expectation for Phoenix-area data centers; developers are prioritizing dry cooling / closed-loop systems, early coordination on site selection, power and water feasibility, and transparent communication with communities. The article cites a Comarch project designed by Gensler that channels roof rainwater into a rain garden, and notes Comarch won Industrial Project of the Year at the 2025 Red Awards.
    • Background and details: The piece references regional context including negotiations among the Colorado River Basin states on new operating guidelines and Arizona’s long-term water planning; it provides a benchmarking metric—WUE ≈ 1.9 liters per kWh—and explains that air-cooled/dry cooling can approach WUE of zero but may require higher capital investment and performance evaluation during extreme temperatures.
  • No one wanted to redevelop this polluted property. Then came AI.

    Viridian Partners has proposed to buy Janesville’s 250-acre former GM site, remediate contamination, and build an $8 billion, 11-building, 800 MW data center campus.

    • Main announcement:Viridian Partners offers to purchase a 250-acre parcel owned by the city of Janesville, remediate soil contaminated with hydrocarbons, heavy metals and PFAS at an estimated $30 million cleanup cost, and construct an 11-building, 800 MW data center campus with development partner Abbleby Strategy Group; the proposal estimates ~600 permanent jobs and ~13,000 construction jobs, and includes working with Alliant Energy and American Transmission Company to build a new electrical substation.
    • Background and other details: The EPA released guidance (Jan 2026) identifying 335 brownfields potentially suitable for data centers; the article references other large projects such as the $15 billion Stargate data center (OpenAI & Oracle), notes a canceled $20 million EPA community change grant and an ineligible $773 million environmental trust, and documents local energy, emissions, public-health, and political concerns including proposed new natural gas peaking plants, a citizen ballot initiative, and legislative proposals to expand developer access to brownfields funding.
  • It’s Time to End Data Centers’ Massive Tax Break

    The Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC) is urging Virginia legislators and Governor Spanberger to eliminate or phase out the $1.9 billion annual sales tax exemption for data center equipment and is mobilizing constituents to contact their representatives before the legislature reconvenes.

    • Main announcement/action: PEC asks Virginians to urge the General Assembly and Governor Spanberger to end or phase out the $1.9 billion annual sales tax break for data centers; the Senate’s budget would phase out the exemption while the House keeps it. Key dates and actions: reconvene April 23 (legislature), advocacy kick-off Zoom call March 30 at 6:30 p.m. (register link provided), and a “Send Your Email” action page to contact delegates, senators and the governor today.
    • Background and details: PEC cites Dominion Energy’s 70 GWs of load requests and ongoing monthly >1 GW requests, estimates of over $100 billion in new generation/transmission/substation infrastructure (including $30 billion for transmission and a 114-mile, 765 kilovolt proposed line), and an independent PEC analysis estimating $53–$99 million/year in health damages from on-site fossil generation at a Loudoun County facility. Also summarizes bill statuses (HB153/SB94; SB553/HB496; HB507; SB619/HB155; SB339/HB658).
  • Aligned Data Centers Closes on $2.58 Credit Facility

    Aligned Data Centers has announced a $2.58 billion revolving credit facility to finance US data center expansion.

    • Main announcement: Aligned secured a $2.58 billion revolving credit facility backed by six later-stage data centers (locations include Dallas, Phoenix, Northern Virginia). The facility matures in three years with the option for two one-year extensions and will be used to finish constructing the sites and finance future development projects; lenders include insurance companies, pension funds and other institutions, with PGIM confirmed as an anchor lender.
    • Background and other details: Aligned already maintains a credit facility with banks and intends to increase the new facility’s borrowing capacity as it adds data centers. The financing comes ahead of a previously agreed $40 billion acquisition of Aligned by a group led by BlackRock Inc.’s Global Infrastructure Partners from Macquarie Asset Management, which is expected to close later this year.
  • Pima County Directs $20.8 Million in Project Blue Land Sale Proceeds to Countywide Priorities

    Pima County Board of Supervisors has approved a spending plan allocating the $20,855,849 net proceeds from the Project Blue land sale.

    • Allocation details: The board earmarked $10.75 million for capital improvement projects (Arthur Pack field lights, Presidio elevator modernization, countywide solar projects, Canoa Ranch campground, middle-mile field inspection, cultural monitoring, historic preservation); $3.12 million for economic development; $2 million for neighborhood reinvestment; $1 million each for environmental health and workforce development; $485,849 for intergovernmental relations. The final plan also shifts $2.5 million previously labeled for special projects/contingency into three new buckets: $1.017 million for public records request enhancements (new request management system, implementation, added Clerk’s Office staffing), $1.178 million for utility assistance and weatherization, and $305,000 for a code enforcement officer plus three years of startup costs.
    • Context and timing: The land sale tied to Beale Infrastructure’s proposed Project Blue data center closed on Dec. 24, 2025 delivering a net deposit of $20,855,849; County Administrator Jan Lesher presented an initial framework on March 3, 2026 and a revised proposal at the March 24, 2026 board meeting before the supervisors’ final decision.

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