Billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya says the world’s largest technology firms should help offset the local costs of their massive energy footprints or risk public resistance that could slow the global race to build AI infrastructure.
In a new post on X, the Social Capital founder points to two recent cases in which hyperscalers backed away from major data center projects after community opposition over electricity use.
Palihapitiya questions whether these incidents were isolated or early signs of a broader backlash.
“Google was about to lose a vote by the Indianapolis City Council and withdrew a proposal for a $1B data center. Microsoft pulled a similar project in Wisconsin based on community pushback.
Are these isolated incidents or the beginning of a trend?”
The billionaire cites Bloomberg data, which shows that wholesale electricity costs have risen 267% in just five years in areas near data centers.
“If the data below is accurate, then we should expect that more local communities will push back to stop data center buildouts in their region if it spikes electricity prices so much.”
He says hyperscalers such as Google, Microsoft, and Amazon have both the means and the incentive to solve the problem directly.
“A solution, however, is for these hyperscalers to use their robust free cash flow to go into local areas and pay for solar+storage or pay for the electricity for every resident. Either way, the hyperscalers should take the electricity costs of local residents to zero and start buying goodwill.”
Palihapitiya warns that without such action, the expansion of global AI capacity could face new friction.
“Otherwise, I expect more local communities to push back on these data centers, which will complicate the AI buildout that needs to happen.”
Earlier this month, the billionaire cited an energy firm executive who estimated that electricity rates could double in five years, driven by the consumption of hyperscale data centers and server farms.
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