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What a Data Center Does to Where You Live — And How Far the Damage Reaches
They tell you it's just a building full of computers. Here's what they don't tell you.
AT THE FENCE LINE:
The air around a data center is not the same air you grew up breathing. Diesel backup generators — which these facilities require by the dozens or even hundreds — release fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) linked to asthma, heart disease, and respiratory illness. Those generators emit 200 to 600 times more nitrogen oxides than natural gas plants. (World Resources Institute) At the xAI facility in Memphis, a Time Magazine investigation found that nitrogen dioxide levels in the air markedly increased from pre-data center levels in areas immediately surrounding the facility. (Sehn)
The noise never stops. Internal noise levels can reach up to 96 decibels — well above the 85 dB threshold considered harmful to human hearing. (PubMed Central) Neighbors near a Virginia facility described sound levels of 90 decibels at their homes. One resident said he can no longer open his windows. Another put mattresses against the glass to block it out.
The light from hyperscale facilities runs all night, disrupting the natural circadian rhythms of the body — including melatonin production and sleep-wake cycles. (EHP) Sleep disruption. Chronic stress. Hearing loss. These aren't hypotheticals. They are documented outcomes in communities that said yes before they understood what they were saying yes to.
WITHIN A MILE:
The land changes. The average data center site in 2024 covered about 224 acres — roughly 450 football fields — a 144% increase in footprint since 2022. (World Resources Institute) Farmland gone. Forests cleared. Viewsheds destroyed.
The water starts disappearing. A mid-sized data center uses roughly 300,000 gallons of water per day — the same as 1,000 homes. (Nixon Peabody) Between 80 and 90 percent of that water comes from surface water or groundwater — often the same sources your tap water comes from. (Fwpcoa) Most of it evaporates in the cooling towers and never comes back.
Wildlife starts acting differently. Researchers describe data centers as potential "sensory danger zones" — places where light and noise exceed the thresholds at which there are measurable fitness consequences for species. (National Wildlife Federation) Animal communication breaks down. Migration patterns shift. Nesting fails.
MILES AWAY — AND DOWNSTREAM:
The water table doesn't stop at the property line. Heavy reliance on groundwater can lead to aquifer depletion that threatens ecosystems and diminishes long-term water availability for surrounding communities — not just those next door. (Waterplan)
The power plants that feed these facilities pollute far beyond the data center itself. Datacenters rely heavily on energy from large-scale power plants — facilities now increasingly co-located with data centers to avoid delays in grid upgrades. (arXiv) Whatever that plant burns, your airshed absorbs.
A September 2025 study found that air pollutants from data center operations increase rates of respiratory diseases and cardiovascular conditions, and elevate cancer risks among nearby communities. (EHP)
THIS IS PENNSYLVANIA RIGHT NOW.
From Penn Forest Township to Kline Township to Salem Township to Archbald Borough — proposals are moving. Permits are being filed.
Ordinances are being written or ignored.
The research is clear. The damage is real. The question is whether your municipality is asking the hard questions before the ground gets broken — or after.
You deserve to know what's being built next to your water. Your air. Your land.
PA Data Center Accountability / Carbon County, PA
Unpaid. Independent. Sourced.
#VESTLife #Amazon #SusquehannaRiver #Pennsylvania #DataCenters #DontBelieveThoseLies
Sources: National Wildlife Federation (Sept. 2025) · World Resources Institute (Feb. 2026) · Environmental Health Project (Feb. 2026) · PMC/Public Health Research (2025) · Science & Environmental Health Network (Aug. 2025) · Nixon Peabody/Joyce Foundation (2024) · Smithsonian Magazine (Sept. 2025)
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