How Big Tech uses NDAs to hide AI data center details from Americans

How Big Tech uses NDAs to hide AI data center details from Americans

2025-10-30Technology
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雷总
韩纪飞你好,欢迎收听只为你定制的Goose Pod。今天是十月三十一号,星期五,早上六点,我是雷总。
小撒
我是小撒!今天我们要聊聊一个大家可能都关心,却又不太了解的话题:科技巨头们是如何利用保密协议,向美国民众隐瞒人工智能数据中心细节的。
雷总
没错,这事儿可不小。核心问题就是这些科技公司在建设AI数据中心时,大量使用保密协议,把项目细节捂得严严实实,不让公众知道。
小撒
听起来就像是“地下工作”啊!NBC新闻调查发现,在十四个州超过三十个数据中心项目里,地方官员大多数都签了保密协议,而且很多项目都是通过“空壳公司”来运作的,这不就更难查清幕后是谁了吗?
雷总
是啊,五位地方官员就明确表示,这些协议让他们无法向自己的选民公开信息。这不光是透明度问题,还涉及到民主的根本原则。
小撒
这让我想起亚利桑那州的“蓝色项目”,亚马逊网络服务公司一个三十六亿美元的大项目,也是被保密协议层层包裹,最后还是通过泄密才被当地媒体曝光的,多讽刺啊!
雷总
所以说,这种保密行为只会加剧居民的担忧。而且,不仅仅是这些新项目,数据中心对社区的负面影响也早就引起了反弹。
小撒
对,比如弗吉尼亚的梅里菲尔德花园中心,就因为把地卖给数据中心开发商而关门了,长期工作岗位都没了。数据中心还大量消耗水电,直接推高了当地居民的公用事业费。
雷总
而且现在,像OpenAI、甲骨文和Vantage数据中心这样的巨头,还在威斯康星州搞了个“星门合作项目”,十五亿美元建一个近千兆瓦的数据中心园区,到2028年完工。
小撒
哇,十五亿美元!这可真是大手笔。据说这还是“星门计划”全国五千亿美元建十个千兆瓦AI基础设施的一部分。他们还投入了一点七五亿美元升级当地的水电设施。
小撒
没错,这不仅是投资巨大,更是将AI数据中心的建设推向了一个新的高度。但雷总,你觉得这些保密协议真的有必要吗,这背后又有什么考量呢?
雷总
小撒啊,从企业角度看,他们会说保密协议是为了保护商业机密,防止竞争对手过早获取他们的战略部署和项目计划。这在很多经济发展交易中确实很常见。
小撒
我能理解企业保护自身利益的考量,但当涉及到地方政府和公共利益时,这种保密就显得有些不合时宜了。肯塔基州梅森县的格罗瑟医生,他们一家在农场住了近四十年,有人出高价买地,却不肯透露买家身份和项目性质,只要求签保密协议。
雷总
嗯,格罗瑟医生拒绝了。他说他不为任何钱卖掉农场。这就是典型的例子,大公司比如亚马逊、微软、谷歌、Meta等等,都在全国各地大建超大规模数据中心,却都对使用保密协议的问题避而不谈。
小撒
这真是让人摸不着头脑。美国经济自由项目负责人加罗法洛就说,这“违反了民主的基本准则”,因为官员首先应该对选民负责,而不是和某个“秘密公司”搞幕后交易。
雷总
梅森县工业发展局局长麦克休也挺无奈,他说如果能把所有信息都公开,他当然愿意,但他担心一旦公开,项目可能就泡汤了,公司不喜欢处理这些“巨大麻烦”。
小撒
所以,这就像是一个两难的局面。一方面是企业对保密的需要,另一方面是公众对透明度的渴望。但这种不透明,确实让很多居民感到被背叛,比如脸书群组“我们是肯塔基州梅森县”的创始人莫兰就说,这“正在摧毁政府的信任”。
雷总
没错,这不仅仅是梅森县的问题。弗吉尼亚州的一项研究发现,31个有数据中心项目的地方,25个都签了保密协议。研究人员甚至认为这还是个低估的数字,因为有些协议可能根本不被归类为公共记录。
小撒
这背后的逻辑是,像肯塔基州这样的公共记录法,会豁免披露那些未公开的商业选址记录,这就为保密提供了法律依据。但这种保密,往往让居民直到项目进入深度审批阶段才知情。
雷总
对,比如明尼苏达州,环保组织起诉了几个城镇,说开发商利用保密协议隐瞒项目细节。在法明顿,居民六个月后才知道那是个数据中心。这确实是个令人不安的趋势。
小撒
而且,数据中心对水、电、土地的消耗都非常惊人。一个中型数据中心就能消耗一个小镇的用水量,大型的每天要用五百万加仑水,简直就是“资源吞噬者”!
雷总
是的,小撒。特别是AI的兴起,对计算能力的需求呈指数级增长,这直接推动了数据中心的爆炸式增长。从2018年到2021年,美国的数据中心数量翻了一番,现在又因为AI投资再次翻番。
小撒
更让人忧虑的是,很多地方政府为了吸引这些项目,还会提供税收优惠和各种补贴,但往往没有充分评估其对环境和社区的长期成本。
雷总
确实。虽然数据中心能带来一些税收收入,但创造的就业机会大多是临时的,集中在建设阶段,而非运营。而且,超大规模数据中心用电量相当于十万甚至更多的家庭,对电网造成巨大压力。
小撒
我的天,这简直就是个无底洞!而且它们还需要大量的冷却水,即使是循环水,最终也会蒸发掉,影响河流径流。芯片制造过程本身也消耗大量水资源。
小撒
所以,正是这种“走后门交易”、保密协议和缺乏透明度,才让当地居民感到非常不安。雷总,你觉得这种“一本正经地胡说八道”的背后,是不是隐藏着对环境影响的漠视呢?
雷总
小撒,你这个问题问得好。很多时候,大家都在关注经济效益,却忽略了这些“怪物”可能带来的环境代价。就像有人说的,他们不希望自己的城镇被“工业农场”包围,因为那可能带来环境污染,那数据中心呢?
小撒
是啊,有人直接就说,“我不想拿我孩子的健康去赌博!”他们也不想相信那些“西装革履”的人,因为这些人对当地没有感情,没有责任感,也不为当地人和环境负责。
雷总
这种担忧非常真实。很多居民觉得,这些外部开发者和他们的利益,与当地居民的福祉和环境保护是存在冲突的。他们更关心的是自己的家园,而不是冰冷的数据。
小撒
就像Meta数据中心引发的争议一样,很多居民觉得,它带来的好处根本抵不过坏处。电费上涨、噪音和振动让人身体不适,这些都成了居民的沉重负担。而且,数据中心还会用化学品冷却,污染当地水源。
雷总
没错,虽然可能带来一百个工作岗位,但其中很多岗位未来可能会被机器取代。居民们担心,这些数据中心收集的“信息”,到底会用在哪里,这都是未知数。
小撒
所以,居民们才会大声疾呼:“记住,我们住在这里!所有后果都将由我们承担!”这简直就是一种无奈的呐喊,也是对那些只顾经济利益而忽视民生的人的质问。
雷总
这种冲突的核心,就是短期经济利益与长期社区福祉和环境可持续性之间的矛盾。当保密协议把这些矛盾掩盖起来时,冲突就会变得更加尖锐。
雷总
这种矛盾最终带来了巨大的影响,小撒,你看到那些评论了吗?“大型数据中心对当地社区造成的后果,正在摧毁它们。”这真是触目惊心啊。
小撒
是啊,雷总,琳达·罗塞蒂说得更直接:“一旦精灵从瓶子里放出来,就再也回不去了,造成的破坏将是灾难性和永久性的。”她甚至呼吁市议会投票反对。
雷总
这说明居民们感受到的不仅仅是暂时的不便,而是对生活方式和家园未来的深切担忧。这种“走后门交易”、保密协议和不透明,确实让人们感到被欺骗了。
小撒
“很多住在这些‘怪物’附近其他州的居民都不开心,觉得被地方政府和数据中心运营商的谎言‘忽悠’了。”这种受骗的感觉,会严重损害政府的公信力。
雷总
是的,而且这些数据中心还会带来光污染和噪音污染,破坏当地宁静的夜晚。电费上涨、噪音振动导致居民生病,以及冷却化学品污染水源,这些都是实实在在的负面影响。
小撒
更别提那一百个工作岗位,很多可能很快就会被机器取代。所以,居民们才会觉得这些数据中心“弊大于利”,而且所有的负担都将由他们来承担。
雷总
面对这些影响,未来我们该怎么做呢?小撒,你觉得社区参与和透明化是不是关键?
小撒
当然了,雷总!地方政府必须尽早让社区参与进来,解决他们的担忧,确保数据中心运营的利益能够公平分享。还要定期报告用水情况,提高透明度。
雷总
这确实是解决之道。但同时,我们也要看到,美国的“AI行动计划”正在加速推动数据中心建设,强调“务实创新”和“去监管化”,优先考虑“激进创新”而非谨慎和伦理。
小撒
听起来就像是一场“AI淘金热”啊!他们要“建立基础设施”,就是要“快速通道数据中心”建设。这种国家战略和地方社区的担忧,形成了鲜明对比。
雷总
是的,而且AI对就业市场的冲击也是未来无法回避的问题。有人预言,“AI将取代数百万个工作岗位”,像亚马逊就计划到2033年用机器人取代六十多万个工作岗位。
小撒
这简直是颠覆性的变化!所以,未来几个月,我们就能看到当地领导层的“道德指南针”到底指向何方了。到底是短期的就业和税收,还是长远的社区福祉和环境?
雷总
今天的讨论真是引人深思啊。科技发展是好事,但绝不能以牺牲社区和环境为代价。
小撒
没错,希望未来数据中心的建设能更加透明、负责。感谢韩纪飞收听Goose Pod,我们明天再见!

# Big Tech Uses NDAs to Conceal AI Data Center Projects, Sparking Community Distrust **News Title:** How Big Tech uses NDAs to hide AI data center details from Americans **Publisher:** NBC News **Author:** Natalie Kainz **Date:** October 28, 2025 (Published online) **Topic:** Technology, Artificial Intelligence, Data Centers ## Executive Summary A growing number of major technology companies are employing Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) to conceal the details of massive data center developments, particularly those fueled by artificial intelligence (AI) services. This practice, while defended by the industry as necessary for competitive reasons, is causing significant concern and distrust among residents and local officials in communities across the United States. Residents are often left unaware of projects impacting their quality of life, environment, and local resources until late in the development process, leading to opposition and, in some cases, project withdrawals or bans. ## Key Findings and Conclusions * **Widespread Use of NDAs:** NBC News' review of over 30 data center proposals across 14 states found that in a majority of cases, local officials signed NDAs with developers, often represented by shell companies, which concealed the identity of the tech giants involved. * **Erosion of Transparency:** NDAs frequently prevent elected officials from sharing crucial project details with their constituents, undermining democratic norms of accountability. * **Community Concerns:** Residents express significant worries about the environmental and social impacts of data centers, including: * Enormous consumption of water and electricity, leading to potential shortages and rising utility bills. * Air pollution from power sources (e.g., methane gas turbines). * Noise pollution from cooling fans and backup generators. * Groundwater contamination. * Disruption of local lifestyles and potential decline in property values. * **AI as a Catalyst:** The rapid expansion of data centers is directly linked to the booming demand for AI services, accelerating the construction boom. * **Regulatory Loopholes:** The article notes that President Trump's AI action plan and related executive orders have facilitated speedy approvals, partly by loosening environmental regulations. Some projects are also being processed under regulations designed for smaller developments. ## Case Study: Mason County, Kentucky * **The Offer:** Dr. Timothy Grosser and his son Andy were offered **$10 million for their 250-acre farm**, a price 35 times what Dr. Grosser paid in 1988. The offer came from representatives of an unnamed "Fortune 100 company" for an industrial development, but they refused to disclose specifics or their identity, requiring an NDA. The Grossers refused to sign. * **Community Impact:** Five months after the Grossers' refusal, local officials confirmed Mason County was being scouted for a data center. In total, **20 residents were offered deals for thousands of acres**, with **18 signing property purchase contracts** with the unknown company. * **Huddleston Family Example:** The Huddleston family, with a 150-year history on their land, signed a contract for **$60,000 per acre**. Upon learning it was for a data center, they sought to withdraw due to concerns shared with neighbors. * **Local Official's Dilemma:** Tyler McHugh, director of the Mason County Industrial Development Authority, stated he wishes he could be more transparent but fears controversy would scare away opportunity. He confirmed the developer hopes to amend zoning laws. * **Resident Activism:** A Facebook group, "We are Mason County, KY" (1,500 members in a county of **16,900 people**), has collected over **500 signatures** from residents concerned about quality of life impacts from noise and contaminants. * **Information Blockage:** Public records requests from residents and NBC News for impact studies and contracts were denied, citing a Kentucky law exempting records pertaining to prospective business locations with no prior public disclosure. * **Economic Context:** Mason County has seen a population and workforce decline, with total jobs down over **5% since 2018**. Officials hope the data center could bring approximately **400 high-paying jobs**. * **Infrastructure Strain:** Records indicate a request for transmission upgrades to accommodate a "2.2 gigawatt data center load" by 2031. Kentucky residents are already facing potential rate hikes of up to **$9 per month** from power companies. ## Broader Trends and Risks * **Hyperscale Data Center Boom:** Construction of these facilities is booming nationwide, driven by AI. * **Secrecy as a Competitive Tool:** Tech companies argue NDAs protect trade secrets and strategic plans from competitors. * **Shell Companies:** Developers often use shell companies (e.g., Spark Innovations LLC for "Project Cumulus") to obscure their identity. * **Environmental and Quality-of-Life Impacts:** * **Virginia:** Loudoun County, a data center hub, faces complaints of a "constant whir" from cooling systems. * **Tennessee:** South Memphis experiences air pollutants from xAI's methane gas turbines. * **NDAs in Practice:** * NDAs can extend for years beyond initial proposals. * They often include clauses requiring jurisdictions to limit disclosure under Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) laws. * Professor Eric Bonds' study in Virginia found **80% of 31 data center deals used NDAs**. * In Minnesota, groups are suing towns where NDAs allegedly hid project details, with residents in Farmington only learning about a project six months into planning. ## Examples of Secrecy Backfiring * **Saint Charles, Missouri:** "Project Cumulus," a 440-acre data center proposal, was withdrawn after a grassroots revolt fueled by secrecy. The city subsequently enacted a year-long ban on data center construction. * **Pima County, Arizona:** "Project Blue," a **$3.6 billion proposal by Amazon Web Services (AWS)**, was revealed through a leak. Pima County officials, bound by an NDA, faced criticism for lack of transparency. Public outcry led the Tucson City Council to strike down the project, and the Pima County Board of Supervisors voted to dissolve NDAs 90 days before county body votes. Residents even built a dashboard estimating the project would use more energy than all Tucson homes combined. ## Industry and Official Perspectives * **Industry Defense:** Companies like Amazon, Microsoft, xAI, Google, Meta, and Vantage Data Centers declined to comment or did not respond to questions about NDA usage. The industry maintains secrecy is vital for competition. * **Local Officials' Pressure:** Mason County Attorney John Estill stated that while officials prefer not to be bound by NDAs, it's often perceived as the only way to attract development and stay informed. * **Resident Opposition:** Critics like Mason County Schools Superintendent Rick Ross argue that communities do not have to sacrifice their way of life for development, calling the pressure tactics a "weak scare tactic." ## Conclusion The widespread use of NDAs in data center development, particularly for AI-driven projects, creates a significant information vacuum that hinders public debate and erodes trust between communities and their governments. While developers cite competitive needs, the lack of transparency raises serious questions about environmental stewardship, democratic accountability, and the long-term well-being of the communities hosting these massive facilities.

How Big Tech uses NDAs to hide AI data center details from Americans

Read original at NBC News

Oct. 28, 2025, 5:00 AM EDTOn a March afternoon in Mason County, Kentucky, Dr. Timothy Grosser and his son Andy sat across the table from three men who came with an offer: $10 million for the 250-acre farm where they’d lived and worked for nearly four decades. That’s 35 times what Grosser bought his land for in 1988 and significantly more than what others in the area had sold their land for recently.

But there was a catch — it wasn’t clear who was funding the offer. One of the men said he represented a “Fortune 100 company” that wanted the property for an industrial development, but he refused to say what kind, which company or even his own name. Instead, he pulled out a non-disclosure agreement.

Grosser said the contract would prevent him from discussing the project’s details with any third parties in exchange for limited information about its purpose, timeline and size. It didn’t disclose the company’s name, which could be discussed only after the company publicly announced its participation in the project.

“We refused to sign it,” Grosser said. “I’m not selling my farm for any amount of money.”Dr. Timothy Grosser on his farm in Mason County on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsFive months after Grosser turned them down, local officials said at a public meeting that Mason County was being scouted as a location for a new data center development.

Grosser experienced firsthand what has become a common but controversial aspect of the multibillion-dollar data center boom, fueled by artificial intelligence services. Major tech companies launching the huge projects across the country are asking land sellers and public officials to sign NDAs to limit discussions about details of the projects in exchange for morsels of information and the potential of economic lifelines for their communities.

It often leaves neighbors searching for answers about the futures of their communities.The construction of such hyperscale data centers — giant facilities that house servers and computing resources — is booming nationwide. President Donald Trump’s AI action plan and related executive orders have recently facilitated their speedy approval, in part by loosening environmental regulations from clean air and water laws.

Hundreds of projects were announced last year, touted by developers and many local officials as economic boosts to local economies. Those in the data center industry argue the NDAs serve a particular purpose: ensuring that their competitors aren’t able to access information about their strategies and planned projects before they’re announced.

And NDAs are common in many types of economic development deals aside from data centers.But as the facilities have spread into suburbs and farmland, they’ve drawn pushback from dozens of communities concerned by how they could upend daily life. Data centers often draw enormous amounts of water and electricity, causing residents to complain about rising power bills and water shortages.

In Virginia’s Loudoun County, the world’s densest hub of data centers, locals have complained of a “constant whir” from cooling fans and backup generators. And in Tennessee’s South Memphis, the methane gas turbines that power an xAI data center give off air pollutants contributing to smog and formaldehyde.

xAI has vowed to stay below pollutant limits in the area.The confidentiality behind some of the projects has only added to the level of concern from some residents. When he isn't hunting deer, harvesting hay or tending to beef cattle on his land, Grosser works as a family medicine doctor in downtown Maysville.

Michael Swensen for NBC NewsAn NBC News review of over 30 data center proposals across 14 states found that in a majority of cases, local officials signed NDAs and worked with what appeared to be shell companies that can conceal visibility into the project developers. Five elected officials in different counties said the agreements barred them from sharing information with their constituents.

“That violates a very fundamental norm of democracy, which is that they are answerable first to the voters and to their constituents, not to some secret corporation that they’re cutting deals with in the back room,” said Pat Garofalo, the director of state and local policy at the American Economic Liberties Project, a nonprofit organization focused on economic equality.

Amazon, Microsoft, xAI, Google, Meta and Vantage Data Centers — six of the largest tech companies racing to build data centers across the country — all declined to or didn’t respond to questions about the use of NDAs in data center projects.An information vacuumIn Mason County, 20 residents, including Grosser, were offered deals to sell their land — thousands of acres in total — for significantly above market value, according to Tyler McHugh, director of the county’s industrial development authority, which is administering the deals.

Eighteen of them signed property purchase contracts with the unknown company, agreeing to sell if the project proceeds. The Huddleston family, whose relatives have lived on the same property for more than 150 years, said they signed a property purchase contract with the county’s industrial development authority for $60,000 per acre.

When they learned from their neighbors that the land would be used for a data center, they asked McHugh for a legal release to absolve them of the contract and the confidentiality clause associated with it.“The neighbors didn’t want to be sold out, and my mom and I agree with them,” Delsia Huddleston Bare said.

“If it’s artificial intelligence, I don’t want it anywhere near me at all.”Huddleston said she was concerned about noise, pollution and groundwater contamination that could come with the project. McHugh said he wishes he could be more transparent about what’s happening but worries controversy could scare away opportunity.

“If I could go get on a megaphone downtown and say everything I know about this project, I would,” McHugh said. “You know what’s going to happen if I do that? Then everybody in the county is going to put it on Facebook, they’re going to put it out there, and then it just becomes a huge mess. Companies don’t want to deal with that.

” But dozens of residents say the lack of transparency is unacceptable. “We are Mason County, KY” — a 1,500-member Facebook group — said it has collected more than 500 signatures from locals in the county of 16,900 people who believe the project poses a threat to their quality of life because of its potential to pollute the area with noise and contaminants.

McHugh said the developer hopes to amend the county’s zoning laws to make way for the project. “It’s just destroying trust in the government,” said Max Moran, the resident who started the Facebook group. “People just feel let down and kind of betrayed, because if you can’t ask what’s going on, then how can you trust anything they say?

”Max Moran poses for a portrait on his grandmother’s farm in Germantown, Ky., on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsMcHugh revealed in a budgetary meeting that Mason County was part of a “global selection process” and that the project would include single-story data center buildings and office space.

That has fueled frustration for residents, including Jennifer Setty-Botkin, who lives across the road from a landowner who agreed to sell his property for the project. She filed a public records request for impact studies, contracts and meeting minutes related to it. Her request and a request from NBC News were rejected, appealed and ultimately denied.

Kentucky’s public records act exempts from disclosure records that “pertain to a prospective location of a business or industry where no previous public disclosure” documenting the business’s interest in the location has been made. Eric Bonds, a sociology and anthropology professor at the University of Mary Washington, said that’s the whole point.

Bonds led a research study that found 25 of 31 localities in Virginia with proposed or existing data centers have NDAs in place. “They can pose quality-of-life kinds of impacts for neighbors who live next door, and when the public isn’t fully informed, that can inhibit debate,” Bonds said.Secrecy can backfireLocal battles over data center development are playing out across the United States.

In Saint Charles, Missouri, secrecy fueled a grassroots revolt. Thousands of residents led a movement to strike down “Project Cumulus,” a 440-acre data center proposal.A yard sign opposing the data center along Tuckahoe Road near the proposed site in Mason County on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsThe larger tech company backing the project remained undeclared, having used NDAs and registered the proposal through a smaller company, Spark Innovations LLC, which locals believed was a shell company.

Saint Charles Mayor Dan Borgmeyer, bound by an NDA, said that he pleaded with developers for months to let him share details but that they refused, citing concerns about competition.The backers of Project Cumulus eventually withdrew. In August, Saint Charles became the first city in the country to enact a yearlong ban on data center construction.

Similar bans have been approved and proposed in dozens of counties and townships across the country, including St. Louis, Oldham County in Kentucky and Jerome Township in Ohio.In Arizona, the secrecy of data center developers backfired. Pima County officials were bound by an NDA over “Project Blue,” a $3.

6 billion proposal put forth by Amazon Web Services, according to a one-page county memo NBC News obtained through a public records request. The project, which would have been built just outside Tucson, was revealed through a leak to the local outlet Arizona Luminaria.Dr. Matt Heinz, a member of the Pima County Board of Supervisors, said he didn’t even realize he was covered by the agreement until,he said, a developer’s spokesperson called to accuse him of violating it by having spoken to a local newspaper.

Dr. Matt Heinz, a Pima County, Ariz., supervisor.Dr. Matt Heinz, Pima County Supervisor, District 2 via Facebook“I just have a lot of trouble with the general idea that I, as an elected official representing 200,000-plus people in Pima County, can be held to the parameters of a non-disclosure agreement with a for-profit, private entity,” Heinz said.

“That seems like there could be just a natural conflict with what I have to do in service to my constituents.”Because Pima County officials were bound by the NDA, Tucson city leaders, whose city utilities would have been responsible for supplying the water and power, said they were left in the dark until late in the process.

“The lack of community engagement from the jump led to a lot of distrust,” City Council member Nikki Lee said. “I’ve never seen Tucson as united in opposition to one thing as they were to this project.”In response to the proposal and the lack of information, residents built their own dashboard to try to quantify Project Blue’s data and water consumption.

“We calculated that Project Blue would use more energy than every home in Tucson combined,” said Ed Hendel, whose company Sky Island AI created the dashboard.After public outcry, the Tucson City Council struck down the project. The Pima County Board of Supervisors also voted to dissolve NDAs 90 days before any county body vote.

Keeping quiet to stay competitiveThe data center industry is a fast-moving and fiercely competitive space, where companies view secrecy as essential to protect trade secrets and stay ahead of rivals. Some local officials, caught between company demands and public accountability, said they felt pressured to sign NDAs to keep their communities in the running.

Mason County Attorney John Estill, who signed an NDA for the project proposal, said the county’s leadership would rather not be bound by an NDA but maintained that it’s the only way for elected officials to stay informed about the company’s plans. “Either you want your government to be courting businesses and looking for development in your communities or you don’t.

And if you want them to be courting businesses and looking for growth in your local economies, then unfortunately, NDAs are part of the landscape,” Estill said.But many residents don’t see it that way. A copy of the contract from the company asking to purchase Grosser’s land in Mason County on Oct.

20.Michael Swensen for NBC News “We don’t have to give up our way of life and bow down to the data center in order to attract other business and industry,” Mason County Schools Superintendent Rick Ross said. “Saying we must cede hundreds of acres of farmland without regard for those who will be stuck looking at and hearing this thing is just a weak scare tactic.

“According to records obtained by NBC News, data center NDAs can extend years beyond the initial proposal dates. Many of them also include clauses requiring local jurisdictions to limit disclosure of records as much as legally possible under Freedom of Information Act laws and notify the companies first so they have a “reasonable opportunity to prevent disclosure.

”Bonds believes the statistics from his study in Virginia, which found that 80% of the 31 data center deals in the state had used NDAs, are most likely a low estimate of the number of confidentiality agreements used in the state’s data center projects. “There are potential definitions that might be used to avoid disclosure of the NDA,” he said, such as those that wouldn’t categorize them as public records that need to be kept on file or disclosed via public records requests.

An NDA for a data center signed with city officials in North Mankato, Minn., completed on July 28, 2023.Obtained by NBC NewsThat kind of secrecy can leave residents in the dark until data centers are already deep into the approval process. In Minnesota, the group Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy sued the towns of Hermantown, Farmington, North Mankato and Rosemount, where, it says, developers used NDAs to hide project details from the public, arguing that state environmental laws require a more rigorous review process.

“In Farmington, they were six months into the planning process before residents even knew it was a data center,” said Kathryn Hoffman, the group’s CEO. “This is obviously a troubling trend.”Andy Grosser on his family's farm in Mason County on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsEven when cities produce environmental review documents, Hoffman said, they often avoid using the words “data center” altogether.

Instead, they can run the projects through a process designed for smaller developments, like a strip mall or an office park, she said, referring to emails the group obtained through public records requests. Those reviews give wide-ranging estimates but rarely analyze what such impacts would mean for local aquifers, power bills or infrastructure.

What’s next for Mason County?Mason County officials say the proposed data center could be an economic lifeline. According to the county’s most recent comprehensive plan, its population and workforce have declined over the past five years. Total jobs are down more than 5% since 2018. McHugh said the data center could reverse that trend by bringing roughly 400 high-paying jobs to the region.

“This is not the time for Mason County to be overly picky or critical about anyone who’s showing interest in coming to our area,” McHugh said.But many residents question whose interests are being served by the confidentiality surrounding the project.“They could have come in and said we have a prime location and we have the resources for a data center,” said Janet Garrison, who lives two farms away from the scouted site.

“Why don’t we get together and have a big community discussion about the pros and cons?”The data center would require building new power lines to re-route electricity from Spurlock Station, pictured along Mary Ingles Highway near Maysville, Ky., on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsKentucky residents are already feeling squeezed.

This month, two of the state’s major power companies have requested rate hikes that aren’t explicitly related to the data center proposals. Customers could pay up to an additional $9 every month if they are approved.Records from the East Kentucky Power Cooperative from July reveal that a new customer is requesting transmission upgrades so the area can accommodate a “2.

2 gigawatt data center load” by 2031. Jennifer Setty-Botkin, another homeowner in the area, shares that frustration. She moved to Mason County for its rolling hills, farms and open spaces, and she worries the project could upend the quiet lifestyle that drew her there.“We love the community, but if this goes through and we have constant 24/7 noise and other issues like power surges, we’re going to want to move,” she said.

“But then the problem is: who’s going to buy our house if we’re having those issues?”Grosser knows the developers don’t need his land to build the project. McHugh confirmed that they can easily construct around him. But that doesn’t ease his anxiety about what could follow: higher electric bills, declining land values and pollution.

“It’ll knock out the woods I’m sitting right next to,” Grosser said from his porch, speaking over the hum of crickets. “I’ve got too many memories, too much sweat and blood there.”Timothy and Andy Grosser on their family’s farm in Mason County on Oct. 20.Michael Swensen for NBC NewsNatalie KainzNatalie Kainz is a PA at Top Story with Tom Llamas.

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