Charlotte Approves 150-Day Pause On New Data Center Projects
The Charlotte City Council has approved a 150-day pause on new data center development, the latest locality to implement a moratorium amid rising national pushback against construction of the facilities.
The council late Monday voted unanimously in favor of the temporary moratorium. The aim of the pause is to allow the city to study data centers’ infrastructure and analyze the environmental impacts they might have on the area.
“We’ve got to dig deeper. We’ve got to really understand not only the legal framework but also the technical information, whether it’s the data itself or the scientific basis behind the impacts to our communities,” Council Member Victoria Watlington said before the vote. “When we can agree on the facts, then we can talk about good policy, and I think that’s exactly what this 150-day moratorium will do.”
The moratorium won’t apply to projects that have already been approved. Projects that are exempt from the pause include those with a valid building permit and those that have a complete application for developmental approval, according to City Attorney Andrea Leslie-Fite.
The city’s vote adds to the growing list of data center moratoriums around the country. Last week, a city in Southern California passed the nation’s first permanent citywide data center ban. New York state is poised to put in place a one-year moratorium.
Charlotte has been considering a moratorium for months. In May, citizens packed a city council meeting for a public hearing where most speakers pushed for the moratorium, citing negative impacts and increased energy costs stemming from what they called excessive water and power usage. Last week, local activists, politicians and an environmental lawyer held a press conference calling on the city council to approve the moratorium, The Charlotte Observer reported.
American Tower Corp.’s proposed data center in east Charlotte is one controversial project that many have rallied against. The 40K SF project would be off of Hood Road, near a nature preserve. A public hearing on the developer’s zoning request is scheduled for June 15.
Moratoriums have become common in recent months across the Carolinas, with Durham passing a 60-day moratorium in May and Apex passing a one-year moratorium in April.
There are more than 90 data centers in North Carolina, according to Data Center Map, and 40 in Charlotte, according to WCNC.
Council Member Joi Mayo said before the vote that the conversation around data centers “is not about being for or against innovation.”
“Rather, it's about taking the time to understand the potential impact of a rapidly growing industry and ensuring our policies keep pace with that growth.”