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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
16MAY

Maine passes first US statewide DC freeze

4 min read
13:06UTC

Maine's legislature passed the first US statewide moratorium on large data centre development on 22 April 2026, with twelve further states carrying active bills and a Sanders/AOC federal proposal now in play.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

Maine is the first US state legislature to pass a data centre moratorium; twelve more are drafting variants.

Maine's legislature passed the first US statewide moratorium on large data centre development on 22 April 2026, with the bill awaiting the signature of Governor Janet Mills. 1 2 Good Jobs First, a Washington-based subsidy-tracking research organisation, counts 12 in-session states with active moratorium bills in the 2026 legislative cycle, including Oklahoma SB 1488 running to November 2029 and Vermont S.205 to July 2030. 3 Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have introduced a federal proposal covering environmental, energy, labour, and civil-liberties conditions.

Maine's bill is the first state-level data centre moratorium to clear a legislature anywhere in the United States. Prior moratoria have been county-level or executive in nature. Twelve states with active bills in a single session is qualitatively different from the periodic local opposition that has dogged hyperscaler siting since the early 2010s. The pattern points at three converging pressures: residential electricity rates rising faster than wholesale prices, water-stress disclosure under state freedom-of-information frameworks, and zoning friction at the planning-commission level.

Governor Mills now holds a roughly two-week decision window. A signature enacts a freeze on new approvals while the state revisits its grid, water and tax-incentive framework. A veto sends the bill back for an override vote that Maine's split legislature is unlikely to muster. Letting the bill lapse without signature is the third path and historically the governor's preferred tactic when the politics cut both ways. The Sanders-Ocasio-Cortez federal proposal will not pass the current US Congress, but it does establish the template that future legislation can be drafted from when the political climate shifts.

Twelve simultaneous state-level bills make the consent constraint legislatively visible for the first time. The next test is whether Oklahoma SB 1488 or Vermont S.205 clears its respective chamber before the summer recess. The breaks are no longer being applied at zoning hearings alone; they are being drafted as primary legislation in twelve state capitols simultaneously.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Maine's legislature voted on 22 April 2026 to stop approving new large data centres in the state while a fuller review takes place, the first statewide vote of its kind in the US. The Governor's signature is still needed to make it law. Maine is the first US state to pass a statewide version, but 11 other states have similar proposals moving through their legislatures this year. The pattern suggests coordinated advocacy: many bills share similar language about energy use, water, and jobs. At the federal level, Senators Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have introduced a bill that would set national conditions for data centre approvals, covering environmental impact, energy sourcing, labour standards, and civil liberties. A federal law would apply everywhere in the US, rather than only in individual states.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions explain why 12 state moratorium bills appeared in a single 2026 session. First, data centre tax abatements have grown large enough to feature in state budget debates: Good Jobs First data shows Georgia, Virginia, and Texas each foregoing over $1 billion annually. This scale makes abatements a budget-politics issue, rather than only an economic-development one.

Second, the energy and water costs of large AI-focused data centres are concentrated in the grid districts and watersheds where facilities locate, while the economic benefits (jobs, taxes) accrue largely at state and county level. The mismatch between who bears the cost and who receives the benefit drives local opposition that state legislators respond to.

Third, the Sanders-AOC federal bill provides a political signal that moratorium advocacy is nationally legitimate, reducing the political risk for individual state legislators in states that would not otherwise lead.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Maine's passage establishes a workable legislative template for statewide data centre moratoria, reducing the drafting and lobbying cost for the remaining 11 states in the 2026 cycle.

    Immediate · High
  • Risk

    A federal framework along the lines of the Sanders-AOC bill, if passed, would impose uniform disclosure and compliance costs on operators currently benefiting from state-level tax abatements negotiated without public scrutiny.

    Medium term · Low
  • Meaning

    Twelve concurrent state moratorium bills in a single session marks a phase change in data centre politics: from isolated local opposition to a nationally coordinated posture that operators and investors must now factor into site-selection models.

    Short term · High
First Reported In

Update #1 · Boom hits wall: grid says no, states freeze

Democracy Now· 26 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
European energy regulators and climate advocates
European energy regulators and climate advocates
GE Vernova's 100 GW gas-turbine backlog, driven by AI data-centre demand, puts IEA net-zero pathways under pressure: 15-27 GW of onsite gas is forecast for US data centres by 2030. The Amazon Boardman $20.5m pollution settlement gives environmental litigation a financial template it previously lacked.
Irish Commission for Regulation of Utilities (CRU)
Irish Commission for Regulation of Utilities (CRU)
The CRU-compliant Pure DC behind-the-meter template gives operators a replicable European consent pathway outside the UK queue. Ireland's existing hyperscaler density and the CRU framework's behind-the-meter provisions make it the lowest-friction large-load jurisdiction in Europe for 2026 approvals.
Nordic operators (Equinix-CPP-atNorth, Aikido Technologies)
Nordic operators (Equinix-CPP-atNorth, Aikido Technologies)
Equinix's CPP-atNorth acquisition and Aikido's AO60DC floating-wind pilot at METCentre Norway offer hyperscalers a consented, low-carbon supply chain that bypasses both US moratorium risk and European grid queues. Norway's renewable surplus and Fingrid connection windows make the Nordic corridor the clearest alternative supply chain in the current environment.
G42 and Abu Dhabi sovereign funds
G42 and Abu Dhabi sovereign funds
G42 and Khazna are tracking Stargate UAE phase 1 for Q3 2026 commissioning with a sovereign anchor tenant. The model insulates the project from community opposition and planning litigation, making Abu Dhabi the furthest-advanced non-US build on the current verified green-light map.
UK Government and NESO
UK Government and NESO
NESO began issuing Gate 2 Phase 1 transmission connection offers this week against a 116 GW applications backlog, with electricity discounts and HV self-build rights attached. The UK is using grid access as an industrial-policy instrument to attract compute investment redirected from US jurisdictions with active moratoriums.
US hyperscalers and OpenAI
US hyperscalers and OpenAI
The four big hyperscalers raised collective 2026 guidance to ~$725bn while OpenAI compressed its own commitment by 57% to $600bn and pivoted to leased compute; the divergence shows capital allocation cycles running independently of AI developer demand, with hyperscalers betting that transformer-slot scarcity in 2027 is riskier than current community opposition.