datacentres
Coverage of datacentres in the Nexus archive.
- Scotland could freeze datacentre projects in challenge to UK’s AI strategy
The Scottish government is considering a proposed moratorium on new datacentre projects, which could challenge the UK’s AI strategy. The Scottish National Party’s national council passed a motion to freeze such projects, now under review by the Scottish government.
- Scotland could freeze datacentre projects in challenge to UK’s AI strategy
The Scottish government is considering a moratorium on new datacentres after the Scottish National Party's national council passed a motion to freeze such projects, potentially challenging the UK's AI strategy.
- ‘Slough is like an experiment’: Europe’s largest datacentre hub leaves town sweltering
Residents near Europe’s largest datacentre hub in Slough report unbearable summer heat linked to a heat island effect, with temperatures rising up to 9C. Research suggests datacentres contribute to this effect, and a local store manager describes the heat as physically oppressive.
- David Pocock urges Albanese to stop tech companies training AI models using Australian content
Independent senator David Pocock urged the Albanese government to prevent tech companies from using Australian content to train AI models. Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young called for a moratorium on new datacentres until regulations are finalized.
- The Reverse Centaur’s Guide to Life After AI by Cory Doctorow review – the real price of artificial intelligence
The article discusses growing public backlash against AI, citing Eric Schmidt's booing at a University of Arizona commencement and widespread opposition to resource-intensive datacentres. It highlights concerns about AI's negative impact on jobs, creativity, and human relationships, with critics arguing its benefits are overstated.
- As the US and China surge ahead, is Europe sleepwalking into AI disaster?
The article presents a fictional 2031 scenario where the US and China dominate AI development, leaving Europe vulnerable to sovereignty threats due to underinvestment in AI infrastructure and robotics. The US prioritizes data centers and AI integration in workflows, while Europe relies on AI for administrative tasks without comparable technological advancement.
- Jim Chalmers is putting a positive spin on the economy, but is the outlook for Australia grim?
The Australian economy slowed sharply in early 2026, with living standards declining despite a boom in datacentres. The slowdown occurred before the Middle East conflict and interest rate hikes intensified, and recent economic data shows limited positive signs.
- ‘Hidden datacentre tax’ costing Irish households millions, report says
Datacentres in Ireland consumed 22% of the country’s electricity last year, increasing household bills. A study suggests this energy demand pattern could spread across Europe, with the US and UK using 6% for similar purposes.
- ‘Hidden datacentre tax’ costing Irish households millions, report says
Datacentres in Ireland consumed 22% of the country’s electricity last year, increasing household electricity bills. This pattern could replicate across Europe, according to a report comparing Ireland’s usage to 6% in the US and UK.
- ‘What you see here is a wetland without water’: how the datacentre boom is exacerbating Chile’s mega-drought
Chile's push to become Latin America's technology hub is intensifying a mega-drought, with datacentres linked to the drying of the Quilicura wetland. Local activist Rodrigo Vallejos and environmental group Resistencia Socioambiental de Quilicura highlight the ecological impact.
- BT warns of smartphone price rises due to chip shortages from AI boom
BT's CEO Allison Kirkby warns that smartphone prices could rise due to semiconductor chip shortages caused by tech companies purchasing large quantities of memory chips for AI-powered datacentres. The AI boom is creating supply chain pressure that may impact consumer electronics pricing.
- Under a cloud: the growing resentment against the massive datacentres sprouting across Australian cities
Residents in Australian cities are resisting the rapid development of large datacentres, citing environmental concerns and disruptive construction. Proponents argue Australia must capitalize on the data boom to avoid economic stagnation, with examples like 'Australia’s largest hyperscale AI factory' in West Footscray facing local backlash.
- US tech firms successfully lobbied EU to keep datacentre emissions secret
US tech firms, including Microsoft, successfully lobbied the EU to conceal the environmental impact of datacentres by incorporating a confidentiality clause into EU rules. This clause, adopted almost verbatim from industry demands, limits public access to granular green metrics, hindering scrutiny of individual datacentre emissions.
- US tech firms successfully lobbied EU to keep datacentre emissions secret
US tech firms, including Microsoft and trade groups, successfully lobbied the EU to include a confidentiality clause in its rules, hiding datacentre emissions data. This provision, adopted verbatim from industry demands in 2024, restricts public access to green metrics, hindering environmental scrutiny.