By Kyle Kaminski
As plans for large, electricity-guzzling data centers continue to crop up across Michigan, Democratic US Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed this week became the first candidate in the race to release a detailed plan that would rein in their rapid expansion.
El-Sayed’s proposal, which he is billing as new “terms of engagement” for data centers, outlines specific conditions he says companies should be required to meet before projects are approved.
All told, his plan lays out a new set of enforceable protections that are aimed at preventing higher utility bills, safeguarding water resources, and ensuring communities have real leverage as data centers and other artificial intelligence projects seek to expand across the state.
“We’ve watched as data center projects have proliferated up and down our state, raising alarm and concern about the impacts on water resources, electric bills, and safety,” El-Sayed said in a statement released on Thursday. “These terms of engagement represent the bare minimum that data center projects should be able to guarantee if they want to move into our communities.”