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graeme | 1 month ago
However, if you want to build a datacenter, you don't need to build it in downtown Manhattan. You can build it anywhere, and some places make it easy to build data centers.
By definition local restrictions apply locally. If you want more housing in Manhattan then Manhattan nimbyism really matters. But if you want to build a data center somewhere you have a lot of options. There's no nationwide vote on allowing datacenter construction.
t-writescode|1 month ago
nemomarx|1 month ago
jonas21|1 month ago
I hear this a lot, but the most comprehensive study I've seen found the opposite -- that retail electricity prices tend to decrease as load (from datacenters and other consumers) increases [1].
The places where electricity prices have increased the most since 2019 (California, Hawaii, and the Northeast) are not places where they're building a lot of new datacenters.
[1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S104061902...
jeffbee|1 month ago
https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S10406190250006...