Briefing Archive

Daily insights on datacenter energy, policy and water issues

Monday, May 18, 2026

Opposition Hits 70%. The Siting Playbook Just Got Three Items Longer.

Public opposition to AI datacenters hit 70% in the latest Gallup, and the template Mansfield, Massachusetts just used to cap projects at 2 MW is already circulating to planners in Georgia and Ohio. Texas keeps the ERCOT and behind-the-meter advantage, but the developers who shape acoustic limits, water sourcing, and benefit-sharing locally are the ones who'll still be building when the moratoria wave reaches I-35.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Hill County Wants State Rules. Smart Developers Will Help Write Them.

Hill County's one-year pause is sitting on Ken Paxton's desk, and Rowan's refusal to confirm 1.6 GW of Temple-area capacity is exactly the opacity that put it there. Developers who front-load disclosure and help write the standards Holcomb is asking for will outrun the freezes catching everyone else.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Beacon Point Sets the 1-GW Template While 300 GW Wait in Queue

Hut 8's Beacon Point locked AEP Texas interconnection, NVIDIA silicon, Vertiv gear, and a take-or-pay anchor before a single transformer landed, while 300 GW sits behind it in the ERCOT queue waiting for the same answers. The developers closing deals in 2026 will be the ones who sequenced power, water, and community terms before site selection, not after.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Behind-the-Meter Gas Is the New Default. Chevron Just Set the Texas Template.

Chevron's 2.5 GW Texas microgrid for Microsoft confirms what Rabobank's 80% figure already implied: behind-the-meter gas is the operating system, and ERCOT's queue is the bypass lane. The developers who lock fuel supply, water offsets, and county benefit terms before FID will set the template everyone else gets graded against.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Hill County Draws the Line. Eight Projects Now Wait a Year.

Hill County's one-year pause lands the same week Gallup put local opposition to AI data centers at 71%, ahead of nuclear, and ERCOT quietly cut its non-crypto data center forecast by half through a 49.8% realization factor. The developers moving water offsets, signed anchors, and locked interconnection ahead of permit filings keep their timelines; everyone else inherits the meeting-room fight.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Closed-Loop Cooling Wins Red Oak While Somervell Calls for a Statewide Pause

North Texas split Monday: Compass cleared Red Oak by bringing closed-loop cooling to the hearing, while Somervell County asked Austin to hit pause. Developers who show up with metered water offsets and pre-built power answers are winning permits the rest are losing.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Three Deals, One Thesis: The Capital Stack Is Buying Electrons Now

Three deals tell the same story: Blackstone backing VoltaGrid, NVIDIA anchoring IREN's Sweetwater build, Constellation's earnings confirming the nuclear bid, all pricing electrons directly rather than waiting on transmission. Developers who've already locked private generation and chip allocation are pulling ahead of the field still queued up behind utility interconnection.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Recycled Water Is the Texas Permit Edge. San Antonio Just Proved It.

San Antonio's data centers run on 75% recycled wastewater while a Georgia campus quietly pulled 29 million unmetered gallons before anyone noticed. The developers front-loading metering, recycled-water deals, and SB 6 load flexibility are clearing Texas permits while peers learn what unmetered means in a hearing room.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Sequencing Beats Vision: Why Fermi's $19B Pitch Couldn't Land a Single Tenant

Fermi's $19 billion pitch collapsed because no anchor tenant ever signed, while NextEra is quietly working 21 GW of large-load interest off a Google deal locked in December. The developers landing capacity right now sequenced tenants, generation, and queue position in that order, and the spread between them and the storyline projects is widening fast.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Behind-the-Meter Goes Mainstream as 30% of New Datacenters Skip the Queue

Behind-the-meter generation now accounts for roughly 30% of new Texas datacenter capacity, with BaRupOn's Liberty County pivot to 60 MW on-site gas after utilities quoted 2029 setting the template. The developers locking in fuel supply, water offsets, and county-level cover before announcement are clearing in months while Florida writes tariffs and New Mexico writes lawsuits.

Friday, May 8, 2026

IREN Stacks Power, GPUs, and Cloud Ops Before the Queue Fills

Nvidia's $2.1B equity stake in IREN validates what the smartest Texas developers already figured out: stacking power, GPUs, and cloud operations before the interconnection queue fills is the only way to energize this decade. The operators still treating power, water, and political capital as separate workstreams are about to find out how expensive sequential thinking gets.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Trump Districts Hold 59% of Texas Datacenters. The 2027 Session Just Got Interesting.

Local opposition delayed $64 billion in datacenter projects across 24 states last year, and Texas just handed the industry a structural advantage: 82 of 139 in-state campuses sit in Republican districts whose representatives will write the next round of rules. The developers who pair that political geography with locked transformers, water offsets, and front-loaded community engagement will own the 2027 session.

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Hut 8 Redesigned a 224 MW Hall to 352 MW. Same Footprint, Same Utility Tie.

Hut 8's Beacon Point lease commercialized with Macquarie pre-signed because the redesign delivered 352 MW on the same footprint and utility tie originally rated for 224 MW. That's the discipline shaping every thread today: contract sequencing, benefit-sharing, and supply chain verification separate developers commercializing in 2027 from those still waiting on queue position.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Seven Hyperscalers Sign On: Self-Funded Power Is the New Permit Price

Seven hyperscalers just accepted self-funded generation as the price of admission, with Meta writing El Paso Electric a $500 million check and Oracle scaling Project Jupiter's fuel cell microgrid to 2.45 GW. The developers who locked transformers and reliability registration before the rules harden are the ones who'll actually energize on schedule.

Monday, May 4, 2026

NERC's Rare Grid Warning Hands Texas Developers an 18-Month Window

NERC just issued its third-ever Level 3 alert, naming datacenter load growth as a grid reliability risk while Denmark pauses connections and Lexington drafts a 50,000-square-foot cap. Texas hasn't moved that direction, and the developers arriving with behind-the-meter generation and water offsets locked, the BaRupOn and Oracle-Bloom playbooks, get an 18-month head start before the political window closes.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

MARA's $1.5B Long Ridge Buy Sets the New AI Infrastructure Playbook

MARA's $1.5B Long Ridge buy collapses power, fuel, and land into a single transaction while Maine advances a 20 MW moratorium and 48 projects worth $156B stalled nationally in 2025. Behind-the-meter ownership is now table stakes, and Texas developers who front-load water offsets and anchor tenancy before zoning will capture what restriction states are pushing away.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Federal AI Build Picks Gas in Months While Ohio's 9.2 GW Stalls

Carlyle's Fort Bliss campus picked gas and broke ground while SoftBank's 9.2-GW Ohio build stalls at $3,586/kW that GridLab calls math that "doesn't add up." Speed-to-power is the moat, and Texas SB 6 already wrote the buffering rules other states will copy.

Friday, May 1, 2026

Fort Bliss Becomes the Borderland's Third Gigawatt Build in 18 Months

Fort Bliss joins a borderland buildout where developers are buying generation, land, and fuel in single transactions because the queue is no longer a viable path. MARA's $1.5B Long Ridge acquisition and Oracle's 2.45 GW Bloom fuel cell pivot tell you what 432 GW of ERCOT backlog actually costs the operators still sequencing power after the fact.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Kiewit Books 5.4 GW for NRG as Gas Turbine Slots Vanish Through 2029

NRG's 5.4 GW Kiewit lock-up signals that gas turbine slots, transformer lead times, and water rights are now sequenced commitments, not procurement line items, with combined-cycle costs up 66% to $2,157/kW since 2023. Developers who secure tenant, power, and water in the right order will build; those raising capital on promise, like Fermi America's $750 million with no anchor locked, won't.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

2,600 GW Stuck in Queue. The Winners Build Their Own Power.

Nearly 2,600 GW sits in interconnection queues with 36-to-48-month waits, and the winners are routing around the grid, see Oracle's 2.45 GW Bloom deployment at Project Jupiter. Texas and the Midwest will capture more than half of new hyperscale capacity, and the developers anchoring power and water first will set the terms.