Inside the data center boom that's consuming Chile's last water

Daniel Sims

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A hot potato: Anti-data center sentiment has intensified in the US since the AI boom began around 2022. However, the US is far from the only country in which data centers, built for AI and other technologies, negatively impact power and water supplies. In Chile, they are one of several factors driving a historic water crisis.

The Quilicura wetland, just north of Chile's capital, Santiago, has the largest concentration of data centers in Latin America. Consuming billions of liters of water annually, data centers have exacerbated dry conditions in a swamp already suffering from the worst drought in over 100 years of recordkeeping.

Although generative AI has brought more attention to the issue as data centers impact communities across the globe, particularly in the US, Chile's data center boom actually began in 2015, long before the birth of ChatGPT. Google began building data centers in the area as the government sought to promote Chile as a regional tech hub. Six now occupy the Quilicura area, among 33 operating in Chile, with another 34 planned.

A 2022 report estimated that data centers built by Google, Microsoft, Sonda, and other tech companies consume around 1.5 billion liters of water from Quilicura annually. Google alone acquired the right to extract 50 liters per second.

The company could do this because Chile has one of the world's most privatized water systems. The country's constitution, a relic of the Pinochet dictatorship, is the only one in the world that explicitly defines water as private property. Over the past several decades, agriculture, tech, and other industries have diverted water from lakes and wetlands, turning the issue into a flashpoint for mass protests.

All of these issues are worsening Chile's worst natural drought on record. Droughts lasting one to two years are common in the region, but a megadrought that began in 2010 has shown no signs of letting up. Rainfall levels have remained below normal for the longest stretch since record keeping began in 1915, and paleoclimatologists estimate that Chile is currently experiencing its worst drought in a millennium.

Microsoft and Brazilian company Ascenty claim that some of Chile's data centers are air-cooled, and Google recently claimed that a Quilicura data center used less water than a golf course. Companies have also attempted to offset the impact with environmental projects, such as planting trees, but locals say the offsets have largely failed.

Some experts propose relocating data centers to southern Chile, where drought conditions are less severe. Despite widespread demands for stricter water regulation during the crisis, the country's government recently withdrew dozens of environmental decrees and began promoting investment over regulation.

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WTF? Humans need water? Say it isn't so!
/s

Fools questing for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow! :rolleyes:
 
Why would other countries put themselves in harms way for U.S and Chinese business.

Data centers are not wanted by citizens in super power countries is for a good reason...because it destroys everything by consuming their lands critical resources.
 
So sad.
Btw, new data centers with latest tech do not require so much water.
Which is probably why cheap a** companies go to these countries--there is no limit whatsoever on water usage despite what it does to the nature and people who live there.

In developed countries, new technologies will evolve, making data centers less harmful, but the companies who do not have monye for that tech or simply too greedy, will suck all the water from Chile and other beautiful parts of the world.
 
OMG .. the last drops of water in Chile were spotted to enter an evil datacenter.

What a tragedy!
Will we ever see water again, or it's all gone??

Can Chilean datacenters drain the oceans?
According to some, "climate change" is making ocean levels rise. Maybe datacenters are here to save us from "climate change"?
 
Why would other countries put themselves in harms way for U.S and Chinese business.
Instead of falling for absurd propaganda like this, why not learn math? Chile's total freshwater resources equate to 923 billion m^3, or some 240 trillion gallons per year. Datacenters are currently consuming less than 0.1% of that.

Meanwhile, Chile's economy is profiting vastly off the taxes from these datacenters, while CCP-funded anti-datacenter groups in the US attempt to sabotage US efforts to match Chinese progress here.
 
Instead of falling for absurd propaganda like this, why not learn math? Chile's total freshwater resources equate to 923 billion m^3, or some 240 trillion gallons per year. Datacenters are currently consuming less than 0.1% of that.

Meanwhile, Chile's economy is profiting vastly off the taxes from these datacenters, while CCP-funded anti-datacenter groups in the US attempt to sabotage US efforts to match Chinese progress here.

Exactly! The CCP is financing "anti" data center propaganda because they hope THEY will build all of the data centers, get AI do do the job and control all of the AI coming out of these things. A lot of newer
data centers use closed loop cooling which consumes much less than the cheaper ones.
If "climate change" was an issue, why is it the world shuts down coal, oil production but China builds more and more coal plants (along with a lot of solar, nuclear). China is counting on being the king of
the data centers.
 
This 'AI' CEO swine continue to feed noisily at the trough, bent on leeching every cent they can from anybody they can regardless of the cost, human, environmental or otherwise. The tech-bros are a cabal of absolute reptiles with no redeeming features. When are they going to be brought to heel. Soon I hope...
 
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