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A quiet policy change in Utah may signal the beginning of a new regulatory phase for AI infrastructure. The state now requires large data centers to publicly disclose how much water they use—an issue that rarely enters the conversation around cloud computing and artificial intelligence. In this episode, we examine why water consumption is becoming a political issue for data center development and why transparency laws often precede stronger regulation. We also look at which markets could face similar pressure next, including Arizona, Nevada, Texas, and California. As AI infrastructure expands rapidly across the United States, power may no longer be the only constraint—water could become the next major factor shaping where the industry builds.
By CRE360signal.comA quiet policy change in Utah may signal the beginning of a new regulatory phase for AI infrastructure. The state now requires large data centers to publicly disclose how much water they use—an issue that rarely enters the conversation around cloud computing and artificial intelligence. In this episode, we examine why water consumption is becoming a political issue for data center development and why transparency laws often precede stronger regulation. We also look at which markets could face similar pressure next, including Arizona, Nevada, Texas, and California. As AI infrastructure expands rapidly across the United States, power may no longer be the only constraint—water could become the next major factor shaping where the industry builds.