Shark Tank” star and celebrity investor Kevin O’Leary is defending the massive data center project he’s backing after Utah residents and a progressive nonprofit sued last week. He joined “Morning in …
(NewsNation) — “Shark Tank” star and celebrity investor Kevin O’Leary is defending the massive data center project he’s backing after Utah residents and a progressive nonprofit sued last week.
He joined “Morning in America” Wednesday to debunk what he says is misinformation about the project.
“As an industry, as developers of these projects, the demand is insatiable because we’re in a global competition for AI and for cloud compute,” O’Leary said. “But in every single location, I don’t care whether it’s Michigan, West Virginia, Texas, Mississippi, Tennessee, if you announce you’re doing a data center, all of a sudden you get a plethora of misinformation.”
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The Alliance for a Better Utah and a group of five anonymous residents filed the lawsuit in Utah’s 3rd District Court June 3 against government officials and the Military Installation Development Authority, a special entity overseeing the project.
The planned Stratos Project data center in Box Elder County, Utah, would span tens of thousands of acres and would be built on mostly private, unincorporated land.
The plaintiffs in the suit are challenging the constitutionality of the special entity and its approval of the project.
Kevin O’Leary: Misinformation about data centers stoking agitation
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“The Stratos Project Area Plan, and actions taken by MIDA and the Commission to enact the same, puts lawmaking power respecting questions of public health, safety, welfare, morals, taxation, zoning, land use, and the like, in relation to a significant swath of county territory in a non-elected MIDA Board,” the complaint said.
Communities and state lawmakers have begun pushing back against the massive data centers needed to power AI, citing electricity use, water demands and higher costs for residents.
But O’Leary says the technology of today’s data centers is “more efficient.”
“What happened 20 years ago when they built them in Virginia, they got a bad rap there because it was really early technology,” O’Leary said. “Yes, it used a lot of water. Yes, it was noisy. Yes, it created heat. That tech is gone. The new-era data center is far more efficient, much smaller footprint, doesn’t use as much water, if any… I think as we get the real facts out, we’ll turn this around.”
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Source: Utah News





