Michigan Data Center Proposals Spark Concerns Over Utility Bills and Environmental Harm.
At least 15 large-scale data center projects have been proposed across Michigan in the past year, with one project expected to consume more electricity than the entire city of Detroit. U.S. Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed has released "terms of engagement" aimed at protecting communities from higher utility bills, grid strain, and environmental harm.
El-Sayed argues that investor-owned utilities such as DTE Energy and Consumers Energy are pushing for fast-track approvals without adequate oversight, despite rising rates and persistent reliability problems. His campaign claims that these utilities have a history of rate hikes without improvements in service, accusing them of "steamrolling" local governments and regulators.
The proposal, known as "Our Communities, Our Terms," sets out a series of conditions that data center projects would need to meet before receiving approval, including:
- No rate hikes: Data centers must pay for their own energy demand.
- Community transparency: Local residents have a meaningful role in approvals and negotiating community benefits.
- Energy reliability guarantees: Projects must improve grid reliability funded by data center revenues.
- Jobs guarantees: Developers face penalties if promised local jobs fail to materialize.
- Water protection: Data centers use closed-loop cooling systems to limit water use and pollution.
- Community benefits agreements: Binding agreements deliver tangible benefits such as grid upgrades, buried power lines, and improvements to water infrastructure.
El-Sayed's campaign emphasized that he has never taken campaign contributions from utility companies benefiting from rapid data center expansion. He is competing in the Democratic primary against U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens of Birmingham and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow of Royal Oak.
At least 15 large-scale data center projects have been proposed across Michigan in the past year, with one project expected to consume more electricity than the entire city of Detroit. U.S. Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed has released "terms of engagement" aimed at protecting communities from higher utility bills, grid strain, and environmental harm.
El-Sayed argues that investor-owned utilities such as DTE Energy and Consumers Energy are pushing for fast-track approvals without adequate oversight, despite rising rates and persistent reliability problems. His campaign claims that these utilities have a history of rate hikes without improvements in service, accusing them of "steamrolling" local governments and regulators.
The proposal, known as "Our Communities, Our Terms," sets out a series of conditions that data center projects would need to meet before receiving approval, including:
- No rate hikes: Data centers must pay for their own energy demand.
- Community transparency: Local residents have a meaningful role in approvals and negotiating community benefits.
- Energy reliability guarantees: Projects must improve grid reliability funded by data center revenues.
- Jobs guarantees: Developers face penalties if promised local jobs fail to materialize.
- Water protection: Data centers use closed-loop cooling systems to limit water use and pollution.
- Community benefits agreements: Binding agreements deliver tangible benefits such as grid upgrades, buried power lines, and improvements to water infrastructure.
El-Sayed's campaign emphasized that he has never taken campaign contributions from utility companies benefiting from rapid data center expansion. He is competing in the Democratic primary against U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens of Birmingham and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow of Royal Oak.