From Editors, Earth Island Journal <[email protected]>
Subject Not in This Desert Town
Date November 22, 2025 12:45 AM
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How Tucson blocked a data center to protect its water.

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News of the world environment

&nbsp;NEWSLETTER | NOVEMBER 21, 2025

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Not in This Desert Town

I RECENTLY RELOCATED to Tucson, Arizona, after a decade away. I always think of Tucson as a city where people come to dry out — dermatologically, emotionally, or otherwise. (If you’re unfamiliar, Tucson is famous for having the same moisture level as a baked tortilla chip). So when I heard that someone wanted to build a massive data center here, my first thought was, Ah, a tech company trying to prove it can make Tucson even drier than it already is.

It was calling its proposal Project Blue, a mysterious name that sounds like a Cold War operation, or a rejected Gatorade flavor. It was, in fact, a proposal for a massive data center, reportedly linked to Amazon, that would suck millions of gallons of water every year.

At first, I wasn’t entirely sure what a data center did. I imagined endless halls where tech bros in North Face vests whispered sweet nothings into blinking machines. It turns out they’re just enormous, glorified basements for the internet. They hold your unread emails, abandoned online shopping carts, and questionable search histories in air-conditioned perpetuity. And they’re increasingly powering the artificial intelligence (AI) that’s demanding more and more data centers. Beyond the huge amounts of energy these centers require, those blinking machines that hold all this “intelligence” get hot. Very hot. And to cool them, they need water — a lot of it….

Now, if there’s one thing I’ve learned about Tucson since moving back, aside from the fact that I shouldn’t eat the seafood, it’s that you don’t mess with the water. The water here is sacred. When word got out that this project might siphon hundreds of millions of gallons a year, the public did what concerned citizens of any city should do: They showed up in droves to yell at the government.

Environmental justice activist Karina Gonzalez shares this story of people power and corporate accountability in Arizona.

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