The Server Farm Rebellion: Why Seattle Is Cutting Off Amazon and Microsoft’s Power

Seattle is moving toward a 365-day moratorium on new data centers, a development in a metro area that houses Microsoft and Amazon. If you’re wondering whether your utility bills influenced this decision, you’re asking the right question.

The Numbers Behind the Moratorium

Five proposed facilities would consume enough electricity to power 300,000 homes.

Four companies approached Seattle City Light about building massive data centers with a combined 369-megawatt demand—roughly one-third of Seattle’s current power consumption. That’s like plugging in another Bellevue overnight. City officials admitted they learned about these proposals through Seattle Times reporting, which explains the emergency response. The 365-day pause gives the city time to study infrastructure impacts, water usage, and utility rate effects before writing sector-specific rules.

Residents Flood City Hall (Digitally)

Over 54,000 emails demanded action, proving coordinated opposition works in the inbox era.

Activists, climate groups, and even Amazon employees generated more than 54,000 emails urging the moratorium. Councilmember Eddie Lin’s office alone received over 10,000 messages from residents worried about rising utility costs and environmental impacts. The unanimous committee approval suggests city leaders got the message loud and clear.

Tech Hub vs. Tech Infrastructure

Seattle’s move signals a rebuke in the industry’s own backyard…

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