-
Aberg grabs two-stroke lead at PGA Players Championship
-
Parker shows 'anything is possible' with Winter Paralympic journey
-
Substitute Gouiri gives dour Marseille win before sullen fans
-
Streaks on line as Alcaraz takes on Medvedev in Indian Wells semis
-
Trump 'has fun' buying shoes for cabinet members
-
Trump replaces head of troubled Kennedy Center
-
City of Rome gives green light to new Roma stadium
-
US federal judge quashes subpoenas in Fed chair investigation
-
Hezbollah says ready for long battle as Israel threatens Lebanese infrastructure
-
Democrats accuse Trump of aiding Russia with sanctions relief
-
Brazil revokes visa of US diplomat in Bolsonaro row
-
Cuba releases prisoners, confirms talks with US
-
Mignoni returns as Toulon coach after mid-season 'breakdown'
-
Germans head to Polish pumps as oil price bites
-
UK govt warns petrol retailers against 'unfair practices' during Iran war
-
Gaelic Warrior caps a golden Cheltenham for Mullins and Townend
-
UK's Andrew and Mandelson pictured in bathrobes with Epstein
-
Williams wants Six Nations strugglers Wales to follow Italy's lead
-
F1 races in Bahrain, Saudi 'cancelled or postponed': source to AFP
-
War has halted Gulf oil flow -- and restarting it won't be easy
-
Doris adamant Ireland fired up to face Scotland for Triple Crown
-
Pakistan thrash Bangladesh by 128 runs in rain-hit second ODI
-
Mullins and Townend the golden boys of Cheltenham
-
Mideast war cuts Hormuz strait transit to 77 ships: maritime data firm
-
Sri Lanka repatriates remains of 84 Iranians killed in US attack
-
Top narco trafficker Marset handed to US after Bolivia arrest
-
How will US oil sanctions waiver help Russia?
-
Oil stays above $100, stocks slide tracking Mideast war
-
Tejada enjoys first big win as Vingegaard keeps Paris-Nice lead
-
Dupont wary of 'dangerous' England side in Six Nations finale
-
Trump administration lashes out at CNN over Iran war
-
Which Khamenei family members were killed at start of war?
-
How Iranians are communicating through internet blackout
-
Arsenal's Arteta backs 'incredible' Saka despite patchy form
-
Boat Race captains will be French in historic first
-
Trump vows intense strikes as Iran war heads into third week
-
Tuipulotu says Scotland have 'been to hell and back' ahead of Six Nations title shot
-
Senegal to take back assets of phosphate giant ICS
-
Global shipping industry caught in storm of war
-
Iran defiant, US vows even heavier bombing
-
'Bang, bang, bang': How US synagogue attack unfolded from inside
-
'Cry or fight': Tudor issues rallying cry to sorry Spurs
-
Why is the dollar profiting from Middle East war?
-
Top Latin American narco trafficker Marset arrested in Bolivia: govt source
-
Oil-starved Cuba confirms talks with US
-
Mideast war plunges Germany's energy-hungry industry into crisis
-
'Never forget': Ivory Coast commemorates 2016 jihadist attack on resort
-
Macron pledges no 'respite' for Russia despite Mideast war
-
Dubai's low-paid workers on edge as Mideast war hits tourism
-
Airport workers miss pay as US government shutdown hits one month
In Data Center Alley, AI sows building boom, doubts
As planes make their final approach to Washington DC's Dulles Airport, just below lies Ashburn, a town otherwise known as Data Center Alley -- where an estimated 70 percent of all global internet traffic at any moment finds its way.
Decades ago, the expanse of empty lots, forest and farmland in this corner of northern Virginia was slowly filled with suburban development.
Then came the advent of the internet and an influx of data center builders. They emerged with pledges of tax revenue and investment in return for building structures that, while not pleasing to the eye, were the backbone of a digitally connected world.
Why here? A combination of strategic location, robust infrastructure, pro-business policies, and affordable energy helps explain it. The Pentagon and the US government are just down the road, as were the headquarters of AOL, the early web giant that once defined being online.
The benefits to Ashburn from these anonymous buildings over the past two decades are undeniable.
Woven through the expanse of data centers are new stores, residential neighborhoods, an ice skating rink and public facilities that prove this town is in no way short of money.
Ashburn is in Loudoun County, the richest county per capita in the United States, with towns the world over looking at the Washington suburb as a way to win the future -- even if others see it as a cautionary tale.
Among its 40,000 citizens, Ashburn alone has 152 data centers currently in operation over its 40 square kilometers (15.4 square miles), with more bursting from the ground, part of an AI investment boom creating a race for ever more massive structures.
In 2025, private companies are spending roughly $40 billion a month on data center construction in the United States, according to the US Census Bureau, much of that for megaprojects by the major AI players: Google, Amazon, Microsoft and OpenAI.
This compares to just $1.8 billion a decade ago.
- Off limits -
AFP reporters were given a tour of a typical data center facility by Digital Realty, a specialized real estate company that operates 13 data centers in Ashburn.
"We provide not only the space that you see here, but the power, the cooling and the connectivity," said Chris Sharp, Chief Technology Officer at Digital Realty.
The servers in any given data center give life to basically anything we do online.
Computer rooms here -- which are strictly off limits to outsiders -- are filled with racks of servers for a single client or broken into separate "cages" serving smaller clients.
The emergence of AI has catapulted the industry to another dimension, creating new challenges as tech giants, caught in a bitter AI rivalry, scour the globe to build AI-capable data centers quickly.
These new generation buildings require unprecedented levels of power, cooling technology and engineering: servers running Nvidia's graphics processing units, necessary for training AI, are incredibly heavy, requiring bigger and sturdier structures that need massive amounts of electricity.
"If we think about Virginia alone, just the data centers last year used about as much electricity as all of New York City," said Leslie Abrahams, deputy director of the Energy Security and Climate Change program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Data servers deploying ChatGPT-like technologies run very hot and require new-generation liquid cooling—air conditioning will no longer do the job—and in most cases this means access to local water.
Not surprisingly, the new necessities have made new constructions a harder sell.
"Growing up, we started to see a few data centers, but honestly, not at this accelerated pace -- they're just popping up everywhere," said Makaela Edmonds, a 24-year-old who grew up in Ashburn.
Her family's home is part of a suburban development that abuts a massive construction site.
Another issue is that jobs in data centers are mostly found at the construction phase. Teams in hard hats work the sites, often around the clock. But once operational, many sites betray very little human activity.
"The benefits of data centers tend to be more regional, national and global than local," Abrahams said.
- 'Monumental growth' -
In a major shift, local politicians in northern Virginia are now running campaigns to slow the expansion instead of promising to attract more construction.
For companies like Digital Realty, the challenge is to work with communities to prepare them for what bringing in data centers entails.
Despite any doubts, the demand is not abating.
"The growth and demand in this market is monumental," said Sharp.
F.Pavlenko--BTB