Why New York Pulled the Plug
Your electric bill has been climbing for years, and a big part of the reason is sitting inside windowless buildings full of computers.
Governor Kathy Hochul just hit pause on that problem.
"We're in the midst of one of the most significant economic upheavals in generations … perhaps ever," Hochul said. She added that these "hyperscale AI data centers consume enormous amounts of power, truly threatening to outpace our grid's capacity."
The ban lasts up to one year. During that time, the state will develop a comprehensive framework for how these buildings get built and what they have to do to keep power costs from exploding.
New Yorkers have felt the squeeze. Environmental groups like Food & Water Watch say the public pressure got so loud that the state had to act. Laura Shindell, director of New York State's Food & Water Watch, stated: "This one-year moratorium is a huge step forward for New York communities fighting against an onslaught of massive data center proposals. It comes as the direct result of immense public pressure from people across the state demanding their elected leaders protect them from Big Tech's assault, which threatens the state's clean air and water and New Yorkers' financial security."
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The Politics Behind the Pause
Not everyone thinks a blanket ban is the right move.
State Assemblyman Scott Gray, a Republican, called it "the wrong answer to the right questions." He argued that local communities, not Albany, should decide whether to host a data center. "It freezes investment, takes decisions away from the communities that should be making them and duplicates or ignores work the governor's own administration already has underway," he communicated in a June letter to the governor.
On the other side, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said the moratorium is really about trust. "Right now, New Yorkers aren't convinced these massive facilities benefit them," she said. State Senator Kristen Gonzalez agreed, saying technology should make life better, "not pollute our water, strain our energy grid, or drive up our utility bills."
The numbers back up that public skepticism. Democrats supported it by a 37-point margin. Republicans were also on board, but by a narrower 13-point margin.
Even with the ban popular, it has drawn criticism from outside the state. Senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvania posted a blunt reaction: "China wins." And some governors, including Maine's Janet Mills and Virginia's Abigail Spanberger, had cautioned against similar measures.
What Comes Next
The ban does not affect existing data centers. It only stops new ones from breaking ground while New York figures out what to do.
When the year is up, the rules could get even tighter. Hochul is also looking at a separate bill passed by the state legislature, the Responsible Data Center Development Act, that would ban data centers of 20 megawatts or more for a year. That is a much lower bar.
She hasn't acted on the bill yet, but has said she will collaborate with the legislature to "further review" its nature. She is also advancing a bill that would eliminate sales tax breaks for large data centers statewide.
Right now, 14 state legislatures have introduced similar bills restricting new data center construction, but none had been signed into law before New York acted.
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