US Data Center News & Briefings
Power, grid, permits & projects across every US county — verified, cited, updated daily.
GA · State profile

Georgia Data Center Intel

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

Recent Georgia data center news

  • What’s up with data centers in Minnesota?

    Fresh Energy calls on Minnesota regulators and the Public Utilities Commission to adopt policies ensuring data center development benefits Minnesotans and aligns with the state’s 100% clean electricity by 2040 law.

    • Main announcement / action: Fresh Energy urges the Commission to implement better load forecasting, rate design (large-load tariffs), and transparency on water and behind-the-meter generation to ensure data centers pay their fair share; Minnesota currently has 13 operating data centers with 43 MW of capacity and 12 planned projects totaling 1,120 MW (as of January 2026). Key regulatory actions already in motion include Xcel Energy’s large-load tariff filed July 2025 and the Commission requiring Dakota Electric to file an additional tariff in December 2025.

    • Background and details: Fresh Energy cites national context such as data center investment growth from $13.8 billion to $41.2 billion per year and nearly 100 GW of proposed behind-the-meter gas plants nationwide; it recommends using IRP updates, stochastic/scenario-based forecasting, and tariff rate classes so utilities do not overbuild infrastructure or shift costs to residential customers.

  • The Benefits of Amazon Investments       

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced a major data center investment and related developments in Mississippi.

    • Main announcement: AWS announced a $10 billion Madison County project (Jan 2025) covering 1,700 acres across two sites, with 1,000 direct high-tech jobs averaging $80,000 annually, and 6,000–7,000 construction workers needed through 2027; AWS also announced a $3 billion investment in Warren County. The first building is coming online soon, with full construction completion targeted for 2027.
    • Background and additional details: Local firms have scaled rapidly (e.g., Mighty Fresh expanding from one truck to 14 trucks and adding two more within 90 days at $150,000–$200,000 per vehicle); ABB is investing $40 million to double its Senatobia facility and add 122 jobs; direct AWS suppliers must meet $5 million–$10 million insurance minimums and other requirements; primes listed include Yates Construction, Gray Construction, Haskell, Cupertino Electric, MMR Group, Faith Technologies Inc., and Edwards Electrics.
  • Top 20 countries by the number of data centers in 2025

    DevelopmentAid publishes an overview of the global data center market, trends, and investment forecasts.

    • Main summary: The article provides a market overview noting the United States leads with 4,165 data centers (about 3,000 more being built/planned) and estimates the sector could reach US$22.7 billion by 2030 driven by generative AI, cloud services, 5G, and IoT. It cites major investment figures including Google >€5.5 billion (US$6.37 billion) in Germany and a €1 billion project involving Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom.
    • Background & details: The piece aggregates third-party reports and data (Statista, Axios, McKinsey, JLL, Datum, Baxtel, Global Data Center Hub) and provides regional details: McKinsey’s US$6.7 trillion capex by 2030 (US$5.2 trillion for AI-optimized facilities, US$1.5 trillion for typical IT), Latin America growth from ~US$5bn (2023) to >US$10bn by 2029, and capacity/footprint statistics for countries and hyperscale operators. It is an informational market overview, not a primary announcement of a single new project with implementation timelines.
  • Madison, Wis. Joins Growing List of Cities Pausing Data Center Development

    The Madison Common Council has approved a one-year moratorium on new large-scale data center development.

    • Scope & duration: The moratorium applies to new data centers and telecommunications centers larger than 10,000 square feet and will remain in effect for one year; existing facilities and smaller data centers are exempt. The city said the pause will allow staff to review zoning rules, electricity and water use, land use planning, and community benefits before approving additional projects.
    • Implementation & context: Planning Division Director Meagan Tuttle described the moratorium as a planning tool to develop clearer standards as demand for computing power (driven by artificial intelligence and cloud services) grows; the city plans to engage utilities, environmental experts, developers, and policymakers during the moratorium. The article also references similar moratoria in other U.S. jurisdictions (Coweta County, Douglas County, Clarke County, Springfield Township, St. Charles).
  • Wider view of risk, resiliency needed to thrive in an era that promises uncertainty

    Facilities Dive reports experts advising facilities managers to broaden disaster preparedness in 2026 to include non-weather risks such as energy insecurity, civil unrest, physical and cyber threats.

    • Main guidance: Experts (Laurie Gilmer of Facility Engineering Associates; Paul Morgan of JLL) recommend expanding resiliency planning beyond natural disasters to cover energy/IT outages, civil unrest, workplace violence, theft (e.g., copper) and cyber/physical attacks; they emphasize assessing where mechanical/electrical equipment is sited, preparing backup power and enabling remote operations.
    • Background & specifics:Sedgwick forecasts at least one major U.S. hurricane likely in 2026; California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection forecasts above-normal large fire potential; the EIA projects electricity consumption growth of 1% in 2026 and 3% in 2027 and reports retail electricity price at 13.63¢ per kWh at end-2025; experts note data center demand (including AI data centers) stressing grids (PJM) and growing interest in microgrids, solar + battery systems, VLAN isolation for BMS, smart cameras and advanced security measures.
  • How Hyperscale AI Is Remaking the Power Grid

    Industrial Info Resources (IIR) reported at PowerGen International that the US has approximately $2.4 trillion in AI data center development underway.

    • Key announcement: IIR presented at PowerGen International (Jan. 20-22, 2026) that the US accounts for about $2.4 trillion in AI data center development and that global announced and ongoing data center investment ≈ $3.2 trillion; IIR also reported roughly 296 GW of cumulative planned capacity in the US with more than 70 projects ≥ 1 GW and projected US electricity demand rising from ~23 GW (2023) to ~42 GW (today) and on target to surpass 90 GW by 2030.
    • Details and context: IIR outlined concentration by state (Texas ~$517 billion, Virginia ~$344 billion, Georgia ~$217 billion, Missouri ~$121 billion, Arizona ~$102 billion), noted month-over-month investment velocity (more than $100 billion announced per month over the past year; October 2025 > $350 billion), and described near-term procurement strategies including gas turbines (booked through end of decade), reciprocating engines, BESS, and partnerships on nuclear; timeline compression pressures require many projects to deliver generation and interconnection within 12–24 months.
  • Unplugged: Data Centers Embrace Onsite Power to Break Free from the Grid

    Bloom Energy has released a new data center power report announcing plans and survey findings.

    • Bloom Energy report:One-third of hyperscalers and colocation providers plan to bring power production entirely onsite by 2030; demand for onsite power rose 22% versus six months earlier based on a double-blind survey of 152 decision-makers (hyperscalers, colocation developers, utilities, GPU service providers). The report also states over 50% of new data center campuses are expected to exceed 500 MW by 2035 and identifies a power expectation gap where utilities estimate delivery times 1.5–2 years longer than developers anticipate.
    • Geography and alternatives: The report projects Texas could secure nearly 30% of the US data center market by 2028 and Georgia’s market share to grow by 75%, while established markets (California, Oregon) may decline by more than 50%; it cites fuel cells and behind-the-meter solutions as growing alternatives and references a Research and Markets projection of the fuel cell market reaching $28.4 billion by 2031.
  • Edged US Builds Waterless, High-Density AI Data Center Campuses at Scale

    Edged US has announced recent campus expansions and detailed technical and operational profiles for those campuses.

    • Main announcement: Edged US announced a second 72-MW building at its Chicago/Aurora campus (purpose-built for AI; first facility opened February 2025; second building planned for Q2 2027) and a 24-MW second building in Irving/Dallas (first Dallas facility opened January 2025; second building approved January 15, 2026 and expected to break ground in Q2 2026). The projects emphasize waterless, closed-loop cooling (ThermalWorks; marketed as WUE 0.00), rack-density support (Aurora >200 kW/rack liquid-to-chip; Irving air-cooled >120 kW/rack with liquid-to-chip up to 400 kW/rack), and a portfolio-wide design PUE ~1.15.
    • Background and implementation details: Edged is pursuing a campus-first, repeatable delivery model across U.S. metros (Atlanta, Chicago/Aurora, Columbus/New Albany, Des Moines/Ankeny, Kansas City, Phoenix/Mesa). The company relies on partnerships for electrical and backup generation (notably PowerSecure, subsidiary of Southern Company) and positions ThermalWorks as the technical foundation for waterless cooling; the announcements are presented as executed approvals and planned timelines rather than speculative projections.
  • Your Guide to the Most Important Broadband Conferences of 2026

    Broadband Breakfast has assembled a list of the most important broadband conversations for 2026, with a focus on the first half of the year.

    • Main announcement: Broadband Breakfast published a curated events calendar highlighting major industry conferences (dates and locations) such as NTCA AI Summit (Jan. 30, Online), Net Inclusion (Feb. 3-5, Chicago), INCOMPAS Policy Summit (Feb. 4-5, Washington, D.C.) — including a Broadband Breakfast livestream on Feb. 4 at 10 a.m. ET — and the BEAD Implementation Summit (March 18, Washington, D.C.), noting “billions of dollars now being awarded with BEAD” and a focus on deployment, funding and technology decisions.
    • Background and details: The listing also references recurring and partner activities such as Broadband Breakfast Live Online’s weekly webcast (Wednesdays at 12 Noon ET) and membership benefits (post your own broadband events); other events called out cover topics including AI, data centers, energy, digital equity, fiber, ISPs, and sustainability, with dates/locations provided for each conference.
  • CBRE’s 2026 Data Center Outlook: Demand Surges as Delivery Becomes the Constraint

    CBRE announced its 2026 U.S. data center outlook and confirmed the acquisition of Pearce Services (announced November 4, 2025), positioning the firm to address power and execution constraints in large-scale data center delivery.

    • Main announcement: CBRE’s outlook finds the U.S. data center market constrained by power delivery rather than land, capital, or connectivity; developers and occupiers now prioritize sites capable of supporting 300-MW-plus deliveries within 36 months, with preleasing expected in the mid-70% range and construction/interconnection timelines commonly extending 24–48 months for incremental generation or transmission upgrades.
    • Acquisition and execution detail: CBRE acquired Pearce Services (announced Nov 4, 2025) for approximately $1.2 billion in cash plus an earn-out up to $115 million; Pearce is forecast to generate > $660 million revenue and > $90 million EBITDA in 2026, and CBRE expects to produce > $350 million of Core EBITDA from its digital and power infrastructure services businesses in 2026; financial advisors included J.P. Morgan Securities and Wells Fargo, with legal advisers Sullivan & Cromwell (CBRE) and Ropes & Gray (Pearce/New Mountain Capital).

Need Georgia-wide diligence on power, zoning, permitting?

Book a 20-min call