Neighborhoods push back on Arizona data centers

Article originally posted on HERE on May 6, 2026

Panel of officials sits behind a curved desk in a conference room, flags (US, Arizona, county seal) visible; overhead stage lights and an audience seated in front.

In Arizona, one of the nation’s data center capitals, neighborhoods have started pushing back against data center projects to little avail.

Why it matters: Neighbors say the giant technology centers diminish their quality of life and waste their water, but they face an army of lawyers and lobbyists working to push the projects through anyway.

The big picture: Arizona has 98 data centers currently operating and 86 planned or under construction, per the Pew Research Center.

  • Grassroots opposition to the projects — with complaints ranging from environmental impacts to aesthetic objections — have become commonplace.
  • Yet elected officials almost always approve them. The only successfully thwarted projects in recent memory were a Chandler data center voted down in December and Tucson City Council’s August rejection of “Project Blue” (though it’s since been revived).

The latest: Project Baccara, a proposed 160-acre technology infrastructure campus north of Luke Air Force Base, would bring two large data centers and a 700-megawatt natural-gas-powered generating station to unincorporated county land near Surprise.

  • The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors will vote Wednesday on a permit the project needs to move forward.

The intrigue: 225 people emailed the county to express opposition in recent months, and more than 4,000 signed an online petition against the project.

What they’re saying: “The nearby neighborhoods will bear the burden …reduced property values, increased public risk, and the noise and pollution that will be produced,” Roy Dunbar, a Surprise resident and leader of the opposition coalition, told the county’s Planning & Zoning Commission last month.

Yes, but: The commission on April 9 unanimously recommended Project Baccara move forward.

  • Commissioners said the project, which would have an onsite power generating station, would benefit the entire Valley’s grid and said the location was ideal for this type of industrial facility.
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