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Maine just pumped the brakes on the data center gold rush. While tech companies race to build massive computing centers across America to power AI, Maine became the first state to say: not here, not yet.
The House voted 82-62 this week to ban data center construction until November 2027.
Data centers are power hogs - they run thousands of servers 24/7 and need enormous amounts of electricity to keep those servers cool. Maine already has some of the highest energy rates in the country. Adding data centers could push bills even higher for regular residents.
Seth Berry of Our Power, an energy nonprofit, put it bluntly: "If data centers are allowed to increase those costs even more, it could really be devastating especially for our lower- and working-class populations."
Tech groups and the Maine State Chamber of Commerce are pushing hard against the ban. Patrick Woodcock, the Chamber's CEO, argues Maine already has a robust permitting process: "A moratorium is the wrong approach."
Glenn Adams of Maine construction firm Sargent Corp. warns: "If Maine says 'no,' we're saying no to all these companies, to potential developers and investors, and they can quite quickly go somewhere else."
Governor Janet Mills asked for exemptions allowing data centers in certain areas. The House crushed that amendment 115-29. Now Mills faces a veto decision complicated by her Senate campaign - she's trailing in primary polls and can't afford to anger voters who support the ban.
Maine isn't alone - bills to pause data center construction have been introduced in at least a dozen states, including data center hotspots Virginia and Georgia. What Maine does next could set the template for how America handles the collision between AI ambitions and electricity costs.
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