Data Centers

Background on what data centers are, how Bitcoin mining differs, and the contested economic picture.

Start here for background. These sources explain what data centers are, how much energy and water they use, and how Bitcoin mining differs from AI/cloud data centers. Use them as the lens for the topic pages.

Overview

Plain-language primers

Good starting points if you're new to the topic.

Government / Research

Government & major research reports

The most authoritative sources on national data center energy and water trends.

Context

Bitcoin mining vs. AI data centers

The local proposal began as a Bitcoin mine and is now a data center — so this background, and the research throughout the site, apply more directly than before. Here is how the two types differ.

Definitions

Data center vs. 'AI data center'

Are these different things? Mostly not — 'AI data center' describes the workload, not a separate kind of building.

Same building, different workload

Is an 'AI data center' a different thing?

The short answer

Largely no. An AI data center is still a data center — the same category of facility, with servers, storage, networking, power, and cooling. The phrase 'AI data center' describes what the facility is mainly used for (training and running AI models), not a fundamentally different kind of building.

Where the real differences are

AI workloads run on specialized chips (GPUs and other accelerators) packed far more densely than ordinary servers. That raises electricity use per rack, produces more heat, and pushes operators toward liquid or immersion cooling. So an AI-focused facility can draw much more power — and sometimes cool differently — than a traditional cloud or storage data center of the same size.

Why the label matters less than the numbers

Because the terms overlap, the useful questions are not 'is it AI or not' but: how much power will it draw, how is it cooled, and where does its electricity come from. Those determine the real local impact, whatever the label. (And note: the Cascade proposal is neither — it is a Bitcoin mine. See the section above.)

Economic picture

Benefits and costs, side by side

Economic effects are contested. A few angles are below; the dedicated Economic page covers jobs, taxes, and subsidies in full.

The case for local benefits
The case for caution on costs
A skeptical counterpoint