US Communities Block Data Centers on Prime Farmland as 90% Farmed Counties Push Back
Updated
Updated · Heatmap · Jun 26
US Communities Block Data Centers on Prime Farmland as 90% Farmed Counties Push Back
3 articles · Updated · Heatmap · Jun 26
Summary
County officials and local activists across the U.S. are rejecting data center projects or tightening rules, with prime farmland emerging as a central line of attack against new development.
Food and Water Watch and rural opponents say data centers threaten small and midsized farmers by competing for land, water and electricity, while also reflecting broader anti-monopoly and anti-elite sentiment.
Kosciusko County, Indiana, unanimously rejected a Prologis project in April, while Linn County, Iowa, imposed strict limits in February; both counties devote most of their land to agriculture.
That farmland argument is beginning to spill into wider land-use fights: Eau Claire County, Wisconsin, this week adopted a preservation plan discouraging both utility-scale solar and data centers on potential farmland.
The backlash mirrors earlier resistance to renewables and suggests data center developers may face the same need for early community engagement in rural areas where projects can reshape local economies for 20 to 30 years.