Virginia voter support for new data centers collapses from 69% in 2023 to 35% in new poll — Multi-gigawatt, 37-building Digital Gateway project abandoned

A "No data center" sign
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Just 35% of Virginia voters now say they would be comfortable with a new data center going up in their community, down from 69% in 2023, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll published Wednesday.

This comes just one day after Prince William County's Board of Supervisors voted to drop its appeals defending the Prince William Digital Gateway, ending years of legal effort to revive a 2,100-acre, 37-building campus that, at full buildout, would have been one of the largest data center developments in the country, if not the world.

The region already anchors a great deal of global hyperscaler capacity, as northern Virginia’s data center load exceeds 4,900 MW. And the Digital Gateway alone was sized up for multi-gigawatt demand, across some 22 million square feet of building space and 14 dedicated electrical substations.

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Luke James
Contributor

Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist.  Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory. 

  • Marlin1975
    Mostly because most people didn't know that much before. Now they know their power bills went up and Dominion power just asked for another rate increase 4 months after the last one went into effect.
    Reply
  • PEnns
    The more they know, the worse it looks for the average Joe.
    Reply
  • bigdragon
    Virginia utility bills have been skyrocketing this year the way Maryland utility bills did last year. The more data centers, the worse the problem gets. I'm glad to see them finally pushing back on data centers. Ashburn is full of them.

    In an alternate reality, northern Virginia could have been the northeast's theme park capital. Instead, it's flooded with server farms.
    Reply
  • alan.campbell99
    It seems like pretty much everywhere in the US where these damn things are planned to go is seeing some degree of local opposition.
    Reply