Bill encouraging data center
water studies advances to Virginia House floor for vote
Ben Peters / Inside NoVAFebruary 12,
2024
A committee in the Virginia House of Delegates on Friday advanced to
the House floor a bill that would require localities to conduct water studies
prior to approving data centers. The bill, introduced by Del. Josh Thomas, a
freshman Democrat who represents western Prince William County in the 21st
District, would encourage local governments undergo site assessment to
examine the effect of data centers on water usage, carbon emissions and agricultural
resources. Groups in Northern Virginia have long called for water studies to be
conducted at the sites of proposed data centers, which use large amounts of
liquid to cool the thousands of computers found within. Data centers’ impact on local water sources was most
notably questioned prior to the recent approval of the PW Digital Gateway tech
corridor when the Fairfax County Water Authority sent a letter to Prince
William County officials in 2022 asking that one be performed. To the dismay
of anti-data center activists and environmental advocates, the county never
performed a comprehensive study of the potential impacts on water quality in
the Occoquan Reservoir from the Digital Gateway. “This vote is a wake-up call to the
data center industry,” Thomas said in a statement. The citizens of the
Commonwealth, especially those in western Prince William County, have
demanded more transparency in the data center siting process, and this bill is
a critical first step. HB338 will encourage localities to analyze the impact
of data centers on the community before projects are approved – not after.” He
continued, “While these centers can be an important source of tax revenue for
localities, we cannot allow unrestrained development to harm our communities.
I’m pleased to see that the General Assembly is weighing in on the issue of
data center development. My colleagues and I will continue to push this
legislation all the way to the Governor’s desk.” The
House Counties, Cities, and Towns Committee on Friday sent the bill to the
House floor for a vote. Should the House approve the legislation, the
Virginia Senate and Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin must also sign off for it
to become law. Del.
Ian Lovejoy, a Republican member of the committee who represents western
Prince William, voted in favor of reporting the bill to the House floor. “As
co-patron of HB338 I was happy to see it move forward,” Lovejoy said in a
text message. “As we await the outcome of the data center [study], any
incremental gain in adding reasonable accountability to the data center
siting process in a win.” Read entire article here: |
Wednesday, February 14, 2024
Water Insecurity: Get Involved in all aspects. Bill encouraging data center water studies advances to Virginia House floor for vote.
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