There is a lot we don't know - a few things we do know about the needs of data centers:
- Many thousands of gallons of potable water to cool equipment 24/7
- Large areas of land to site warehouses - often taking farmland and open space
- Each data center has the constant, round the clock power needs of a small city - ratepayers can expect to see increases up to 70% in their bills in the next 5 years.
- When power can't come from the grid - that constant power comes from high emissions diesel generators.
In Montgomery County, a data center site along the C+O Canal has been given preliminary approval without providing data on how many data centers will be at the site, much less river water or electricity used for these highly consumptive uses.
Today, six organizations from across Maryland have joined together to form
the Maryland Data Centers Analysis Group.
MCA joins:
Envision Frederick County
The Sugarloaf Alliance
The Fellowship of Scientists and Engineers
Sustainable Hyattsville
The Tri-County Coalition
Maryland state Sen. Karen Lewis Young (D-District 3) sponsored a bill during the 2025 legislative session that would have created a study about the economic, energy and environmental consequences of data center development in the state.
That bill was vetoed by Gov. Wes Moore, who cited financial strain on Maryland and uncertainty about receiving funding from the federal government as his reasons for doing so.
We are honored to join our collaborators from across the region to gather the facts around this brand new, unregulated land use to balance it with important commitments to farms, forests, water and the climate.
Press release
Frederick News Post Coverage
