A recent Harvard/MIT survey reveals that Americans are increasingly hostile toward local data center construction, with a significant majority preferring e-commerce warehouses over the infrastructure fueling the AI boom.
The Public Perception Gap
As the proliferation of data centers accelerates, public resistance is intensifying. A November poll of 1,000 respondents found that only 40% support the development of a local data center, while 32% openly oppose it. Interestingly, data provided by Axios indicates that residents view e-commerce warehouses as more desirable neighbors than the facilities required to power modern computing.
Electricity Costs and Job Skepticism
The primary driver of this local anxiety is the potential impact on utility bills. Two-thirds of those surveyed expressed concern that the presence of a data center would drive up regional electricity prices. While the promise of job creation and economic growth is often cited by developers, this argument is losing traction. Critics note that, as highlighted in reports on the reality of data center employment, these facilities generate very few permanent jobs once construction is complete.
Escalating Opposition
The pushback is intensifying across different studies. A more recent survey conducted by Quinnipiac University last month reveals a much steeper divide: 65% of American adults oppose the construction of an AI data center in their community, with only 24% in favor.
The Political Fallout
These findings suggest that the era of data centers operating quietly in the background is over. With widespread public dissatisfaction, the siting and construction of these facilities are becoming a potent political issue, likely to influence local and regional policy decisions as voters demand more accountability for the infrastructure changing their neighborhoods.
