| ▲ | retired 15 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
For The Netherlands, construction work causes emissions. There are limits to these emissions. Building a data center means you can't simultaneously build a house anywhere nearby the construction site as that would cause the local emissions to go over the set limits. Next to that there is net congestion. The energy grid is currently critical, if you add a data center that means you will not be able to connect 20 to 30 newly build homes to power. There are currently new homes that are waiting for a connection to the grid before people can live there. Space. In the densest country of Europe (non-microstate), a hyper scale data center could have been a neighborhood. Latest point, maybe not the strongest, is construction workers. While construction workers building a data center are different from construction workers building homes, it doesn't really help with the labor shortages in construction if electricians are all busy building data centers. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | JuniperMesos 14 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> For The Netherlands, construction work causes emissions. There are limits to these emissions. Building a data center means you can't simultaneously build a house anywhere nearby the construction site as that would cause the local emissions to go over the set limits. This is an insane regulation, and I wonder if it was passed by NIMBYs whose actual goal is to prevent the construction of housing near them. | |||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | badc0ffee 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Thanks for the perspective. It sounds like you'd run into the same issues (except for the electrical load) building any large industrial project, which does not bode well for your economy. | |||||||||||||||||
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