Residents living near certain data centers in places like Virginia, Texas, Ireland, and the United Kingdom have complained about symptoms including:
Sleep disruption, Headaches, Stress and anxiety, Fatigue, Difficulty concentrating, and Irritability
Many of these complaints are linked to constant noise, especially low-frequency noise from cooling systems, fans, transformers, and backup power equipment. Some residents describe a persistent hum or vibration that is particularly noticeable at night.
The strongest scientific evidence points to noise exposure as the most plausible mechanism. We already know from decades of research that chronic environmental noise can affect sleep quality, stress hormones, cardiovascular health, and cognitive performance. Similar concerns have been raised around airports, highways, industrial facilities, and wind turbines.
Paul Héroux, associate professor of medicine at McGill University, has warned that high levels of infrasound may affect the nervous system and heart function. He argues that sound, electric fields, and magnetic fields of similar frequencies can have overlapping biological effects because they introduce disruptive forms of energy into living systems.
Recent research has found that chronic environmental noise exposure can affect children especially hard. Long-term noise exposure can lead to poorer cognitive performance, reduced reading comprehension, concentration difficulties, higher stress levels, and behavioral challenges.
The debate is no longer just about technology or infrastructure; it is about the environments we are creating and whether the hidden costs of constant industrial noise are being adequately considered for the people who live nearby. What is unfolding in our world continually shows what we value as a society. It's not human health or human well being, it is the expansion of economies, war power and technology at all costs. Our views of progress are too narrow.