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Maine Data Center Intel

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

Recent Maine data center news

  • In the PR Battle for AI Data Centers, Tech Giants Got a Blue-Collar Ally

    Building trades unions have aligned with tech giants to support and staff rapid expansion of data center construction for the AI economy.

    • Unions expanding training and workshare:Building trades unions are scaling training centers and apprenticeships (apprentice classes doubling in size in some areas), reporting record numbers of members and apprentices in 2025; data centers account for at least 40% of work hours for the Columbus-Central Ohio Building and Construction Trades Council and 50% for IBEW Local 26 in metropolitan Washington, D.C. North America’s Building Trades Unions reports record membership and apprenticeships, and union leaders (e.g., Sean McGarvey) attribute growth to data centers, power plants, and Biden-era subsidies for semiconductors and EV battery factories.
    • Partnerships, funding and project details: Tech companies are funding training and signing labor agreements: Google provided a $10 million grant to a union-backed electricians training program (said to expand the electrician workforce pipeline by 70%); Amazon announced it will spend $20 billion on two data center projects in eastern Pennsylvania (announced with Gov. Josh Shapiro); unions negotiated labor agreements on projects including Oracle/OpenAI’s Stargate campus (Michigan) and the “Project Blue” campus in Arizona. These are factual reporting items, not new single-source policy announcements.
  • Scenes from the great data center revolt

    Andy Patrizio reports growing community and political pushback against multiple proposed data center projects across the United States.

    • Widespread local opposition and legal/political actions: Multiple communities have moved from passive concern to active resistance, including a recall of four Festus, Missouri city council members after approval of a $6 billion, 360-acre data center proposal; a citizens’ lawsuit in Hermantown, Minnesota to block a $1.5 billion Google “Project Loon” site; and a coalition in Pennsylvania seeking a three-year moratorium plus legislation (HB 2150, HB 1834, HB 2151) requiring reporting on energy/water use, banning cost-shifting to residents, and a model zoning ordinance.
    • Project specifics and mitigations for two large developments: In Box Elder County, Utah, a Kevin O’Leary–backed hyperscale campus on 40,000 acres plans an initial ~3 GW power need and up to 9 GW at full buildout with on-site power via the Ruby Pipeline (MIDA says “100% of the power will be generated off the Ruby Pipeline”); Wyoming’s Project Jade expanded from 1.8 GW to 2.7 GW (designer says theoretically up to 10 GW) and proposes closed-loop water cooling with initial fill equivalent to ~20 households and ongoing use equivalent to <3 households per year.
  • Data Centers and Communities: Why the Conversation Demands More Nuance

    The Maine House advanced LD 307, sponsored by Rep. Melanie Sachs, imposing a moratorium on AI data centers with loads of 20 MW or greater until Nov. 1, 2027, and creating the Maine Data Center Coordination Council.

    • Main action:LD 307 advanced by the Maine House (82–62) would enact a moratorium on AI data centers ≥20 MW until Nov. 1, 2027, and establish the Maine Data Center Coordination Council to evaluate impacts on ratepayers, grid reliability, natural resources, and local communities, with a final report due to the legislature by February 2027. The article notes no large-scale AI data centers currently operating in Maine, but projects have been announced in Sanford and Jay.
    • Background and related details: The piece cites industry examples and commitments: Meta’s $10 billion data center on 2,250 acres in Richland Parish, LA, with Entergy adding new generation and Meta committing to match usage with at least 1,500 MW of new renewables, a $1 million per year pledge to low-income ratepayer support (matched by Entergy Louisiana), and more than $200 million in local infrastructure improvements. The article also documents utility responses (e.g., AEP take-or-pay contracts), interconnection and transformer bottlenecks, permitting delays, and recommends early, transparent community engagement and clear communications from developers.
  • Data Centers Face a New Constraint: Public Consent

    Data Center Frontier reports that public consent has become a material constraint on US data center development.

    • Main development: State and local actions are escalating: Maine lawmakers advanced LD 307 (would have paused approvals for facilities ≥20 megawatts through Nov 1, 2027) and proposed a Maine Data Center Coordination Council to study AI-scale impacts; Governor Janet Mills vetoed the bill, but executive action and local freezes (e.g., Bangor’s proposed 180-day pause) are expected to proceed.
    • Additional facts & context: Local and county actions include Hood County/Granbury litigation and regulation efforts (county sought legal guidance from Ken Paxton), Huron County expanding a moratorium to three years, Stokes County rezoning litigation over roughly 1,845 acres, Aurora adopting stringent permitting and reporting rules, and a contested $6 billion data center approval in Festus tied to electoral backlash (four council members removed).
  • Maine Vetoes Data Center Moratorium, but Pressure Continues

    Maine Governor Janet Mills vetoed legislation that would have imposed a temporary statewide moratorium on large-scale data center development.

    • Main action: The governor vetoed the moratorium bill because it failed to exempt a $550 million data center project planned for the former Androscoggin Mill site in Jay, Maine; she said she supports a temporary pause to study impacts but will instead issue an executive order to establish a council to study data center growth impacts (electricity costs, environment, local communities). Key specifics: $550 million project, >800 construction jobs, ≥100 permanent jobs, announcement dated April 24 via the governor’s letter.
    • Background and context: The article summarizes broader national dynamics: growing local and state moratoriums, industry concerns about relocation to accommodating states (e.g., Texas, Oklahoma), and a proposed federal moratorium introduced by Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez; third-party data shows $18 billion halted and $46 billion delayed in projects over the past two years (Data Center Watch). The governor’s action is an announcement (veto + executive order), not a finalized moratorium.
  • The Truth About Data Centers: Why This Conversation is Happening Now

    DataBank has published a multi-part series and eBook, “The Truth About Data Centers,” to address misinformation and explain the real impacts of data centers on communities and infrastructure.

    • Main announcement:DataBank released an eBook and multi-part series to separate fact from misinformation, citing recent policy actions including Maine’s statewide moratorium, Denver’s ban, at least 12 other states with bills under consideration, and more than 100 cities and counties that have taken similar action. The series is framed as part of DataBank’s engagement with communities where it operates and links to the eBook and DataBank Digest.
    • Background and supporting details: The article ties demand to AI growth (e.g., Generative AI 53% population adoption within three years; firm-level AI adoption rose from 8.7% in 2023 to >20% in 2025; work-related generative AI adoption grew 31% in a single year; worker access to AI rose 50% in 2025) and notes infrastructure concerns (impacts on power grids and water supplies), asserts modern closed-loop cooling greatly reduces water use, and states generator testing typically amounts to about 30 minutes per month.
  • California Utilities Have a Solution to Soaring Energy Prices: More Data Centers

    PG&E is advancing a policy and commercial push to attract large data center loads as a means to lower electric rates for California ratepayers.

    • Main announcement/action: PG&E has celebrated the delivery of its first large data-center customer in San Jose and is actively courting hyperscalers; the utility announced a rate decrease in March 2026 and asserts that each 1 GW of data center load could reduce electric rates by 1–2%, while forecasting up to 12.6 GW of potential data-center load from current applications (enough to power 8.4 million homes). CPUC also approved Electric Rule No. 30 (July 2025) requiring applicants to pay transmission upgrade costs upfront to protect ratepayers.
    • Background and other details: Regulatory and research sources (Brattle Group and LBNL) show California’s retail electricity prices rose markedly 2019–2024 (California at 30.29 cents/kWh); Cal Advocates warns transmission upgrades could run in the billions and recommends cost-responsibility rules. State-level bills (Sen. Scott Padilla, March) would streamline environmental review (ELDP incentives) and impose tariffs to ensure data centers offset costs; a March presidential Rate Payer Protection Pledge was signed by major tech firms (Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, xAI).
  • Roundup: Data center moratorium / Chemical costs / Airline merger proposed

    The Maine governor vetoed a proposed statewide moratorium on large data-center construction.

    • Announcement: Gov. Janet Mills vetoed what would have been the country’s first state moratorium on data centers; the bill passed by the Democrat-controlled state legislature would have instituted a moratorium for more than a year on data centers above a certain size and would have created a special council to help towns vet potential projects. The governor cited the absence of a carve-out for a project in the town of Jay that she said would bring needed jobs to a community harmed by a mill closure.
    • Background/details: The veto is a new action reported Friday; coverage sourced to the Associated Press. The bill was intended to give localities more review/oversight of large data-center proposals but did not include the Jay project exemption sought by the governor.

    BASF announced another round of price increases for plastic additives.

    • Announcement: BASF is raising prices for plastic additives, imposing an additional 25% increase following a 20% hike in March. The company attributed the move to conflict-related disruptions that have driven up raw material, energy and logistics costs.
    • Background/details: This is a company pricing action reported by Bloomberg; the increases are described as adding pressure across industries from autos to consumer goods and follow the March adjustment.

    United Airlines CEO said he approached American Airlines about a merger but was rebuffed.

    • Announcement: United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby said he approached American Airlines about a potential merger, which American rejected as anticompetitive. Kirby argued a combination could better position U.S. carriers against foreign rivals.
    • Background/details: This is a reported statement (source: CNBC); the report notes significant political and regulatory resistance to such a deal and that American Airlines declined the proposal.
  • Nation's First State Data Center Moratorium Vetoed by Maine Governor

    The Governor of Maine, Janet Mills, vetoed a bill that would have established the country’s first state moratorium on the construction of large data centers.

    • Main action:Janet Mills vetoed a bill that would have instituted a moratorium of more than one year on data centers above a certain size and created a special council to help towns vet potential projects. Mills said she vetoed the bill because it lacked a carve-out for a proposed project in Jay that she said would bring needed jobs to a community hurt by a mill closure; she plans to issue an executive order to create a council to examine data center impacts.
    • Background and details: The bill had passed the Democrat-controlled Maine Legislature and was sponsored by Rep. Melanie Sachs, who said the veto was “resisting the will of a majority of Maine people.” Similar moratorium proposals have been introduced in at least a dozen states (none other than Maine had passed a chamber), and opponents cited include data center developers, chambers of commerce, tech giants, labor unions, and electric utilities. The article also notes concerns about power use and warnings about potential blackouts in the mid-Atlantic grid.
  • Data Center Permits: How Long They Take and What Speeds Approval

    The article provides guidance on data center permitting timelines and strategies for accelerating approvals.

    • Main finding: In the US, securing permits for a new-build data center typically takes 6 to 18 months, with some outliers exceeding two years; the piece recommends practical tactics such as choosing experienced jurisdictions, submitting complete plans, front‑loading environmental assessments, and phased builds (e.g., launching a simpler initial build and adding complex elements later).
    • Context and references: The article is informational (not a legal notice) and references recent policy activity including a White House directive (July 2025) to accelerate federal permitting, state-level incentives in Pennsylvania, and proposed/tabled measures in New York, Minnesota, and Maine; it also notes examples (e.g., a Loudoun County, Virginia project) and cites industry sources including DataCenterKnowledge, DataCenterDynamics, and Shovels.ai.

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