Metaโs planned data center could be El Pasoโs biggest electricity user. Some residents worry that a new power plant to run it would worsen air pollution and guzzle water.
Artificial intelligence
Texas forecast to be top market for data centers in two years, increasing grid demand
As artificial intelligence pushes demand for more data centers, companies are drawn to the stateโs relatively inexpensive land and natural gas that can run on-site power plants.
Texas lawmakers from both parties oppose Trumpโs order targeting state AI laws
Texasโ new law regulating AI is set to take effect Jan. 1, two months after Trumpโs executive order threatening to cut off some federal money if states pass โonerousโ AI laws.
Texas universities deploy AI tools to review and rewrite how some courses discuss race and gender
Records obtained by The Texas Tribune show how universities are using the technology to reshape curriculum under political pressure, raising concerns about academic freedom.
Proposed data center project for Waco area would be “paradigm-changer”
The project is at a scale of industrial development and investment unmatched in McLennan Countyโs history: acres of computer hardware, substations and a 1.2-gigawatt gas-fired plant capable of powering about 300,000 homes.
Google to build three new data centers in Texas in $40 billion investment
The announcement by Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai is the latest multi-billion dollar investment in Texas by tech companies racing to build infrastructure that can support advanced artificial intelligence.
Will Texas actually run out of water? Your questions about the stateโs water supply answered.
You asked our AI chatbot about Texasโ water supply. We answered some of the questions that it couldnโt.
Data centers are thirsty for Texasโ water, but state planners donโt know how much they will need
A wave of massive data centers is expanding across Texas, prompting warnings from experts who say the new water demands could push the stateโs already strained supply to the brink.
Running Out: Texasโ water crisis โ and the path forward
A growing population, leaking pipes and changing climate threaten the stateโs water supply. Texas lawmakers hope a $20 billion investment will help.
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