5 ways data centers hurt communities

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The Conversation

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Lots of people around the U.S. are concerned about data centers being proposed and built in their communities. But it can be hard for some to express worries about what might happen, and for officials to determine how seriously to take certain issues.

In an effort to bring some clarity to these hypotheticals and possibilities, a group of scholars analyzed the effects of existing data centers in northern Virginia – which boasts the densest concentration of them in the world.

Science communicator Neha Gour, public health scholar Ed Maibach and climate scientist Luis Ortiz summarized their findings in five general categories: air quality, water quality, noise levels, land use and energy costs, identifying what is actually happening as a result of existing data centers. It’s worth a read to calibrate your own concerns.

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Jeff Inglis

Environment + Energy Editor

An Amazon data center sits next to a neighborhood in northern Virginia. Nathan Howard/Getty Images

5 ways data centers endanger their local communities and the country as a whole

Neha Gour, George Mason University; Ed Maibach, George Mason University; Luis Ortiz, George Mason University

Even as they create and enable expansive virtual worlds, data centers are physical buildings in real communities around the nation and the globe.

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