Amazon to build $11bn AI data campus in Indiana that will use electricity of 1 million homes and 300m gallons of water a year

You step back from the quiet fields near New Carlisle, Indiana, and see farmland giving way to something much larger. Amazon has committed $11 billion to build a sprawling data center campus there, known as Project Rainier. This site spans over 1,200 acres and will host dozens of facilities dedicated mainly to training and running advanced AI models. The project stands as one of the state’s biggest economic commitments in recent memory, reshaping a rural area with new construction and infrastructure demands.

Local officials see potential in the jobs and investment, while the technical demands highlight how fast AI development has grown. The campus connects to broader efforts by Amazon to expand its computing capacity across the Midwest.

The Energy Requirements at Stake

Power needs for this campus reach about 2.2 gigawatts once fully built out. That level matches the electricity used by roughly a million homes. Amazon has agreed to cover a large share of the upgrades to the local grid to keep costs from hitting residential users directly.

You notice the careful negotiations around utilities. The company worked with state regulators and the local power provider to handle the massive draw. Still, questions linger about long-term strain on the regional energy system as more data centers come online in similar spots.

Water Usage and Local Resources

Cooling these servers will require around 300 million gallons of water each year. Data centers rely on water for efficient temperature control, especially when handling intensive AI workloads around the clock…

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