AI’s Data-Centre Land Rush Reaches Native Reservations
Developers hunting cheap land, water, and power are eyeing tribal territory, splitting communities between a rare economic opening and fears of a new colonialism.
TL;DR
AI’s data-centre boom is pushing developers onto Native American land, drawn by space, water, power, and tax incentives. Indigenous-led group Honor the Earth tracks over 100 proposed projects on or near tribal territory.
The debate splits Indian Country: while some see economic opportunity through energy sales, jobs, and ownership stakes, others warn of "data colonialism," water depletion, grid strain, and opaque deal-making.
The Appeal for Developers
Practical considerations drive developers to Native American land: vast spaces, established water rights, power access, and potential tax advantages that make building data centres on reservations cheaper.
A Complex Debate
The issue is complex, with arguments on both sides:
Opportunity:
- The US Department of Energy promotes data centers as an economic opening for tribes through energy sales, long-term operations, and ownership stakes.
- Some nations are pursuing their own data and training projects.
Suspicions:
- Krystal Two Bulls, executive director of Honor the Earth, describes the buildout as a “modern-day iteration” of settler colonialism.
- Concerns center around water depletion, grid strain, pollution, and opaque deal-making practices.
- Critics argue that developers often use subsidiaries or Native-owned energy firms to bypass transparency and community consent.
Strains on Communities
Particular concern focuses on water and power:
- Data centers are intensively thirsty and electricity-hungry, putting a strain on local resources and potentially increasing bills for nearby residents.
A Nationwide Backlash
The debate on tribal lands reflects a wider national backlash against data center projects.
- Grassroots groups blocked 75 data center projects worth $130 billion in a single quarter.
- Even towns that paused projects have faced corporate pushback.
- US energy regulators have fast-tracked grid connections for data centers, accelerating the land rush.
Underlying it all is a resource question the industry has been slow to answer.