Microsoft president says building data centres requires trust of US communities


Microsoft's Vice Chair and President Brad Smith, addresses the gathering at the AI Impact Summit, in New Delhi, India, February 19, 2026. REUTERS/Bhawika Chhabra

HOUSTON, ⁠March 24 (Reuters) - Gaining the approval ⁠of local communities has become paramount ‌to building data centers in the U.S., Microsoft President Brad Smith said on Tuesday, as ​towns across the country increasingly ⁠protest the developments.

The ⁠rapid proliferation of Big Tech data centers ⁠is ‌driving up the country's electricity demand and power bills, and ⁠drawing scrutiny from states and local ​communities.

"You have ‌to win over the local community ⁠and ​sustain their trust if you are going to build a (data center)," Smith said ⁠at the CERAWeek conference in ​Houston. "Obviously what you are seeing in the United States is now a concern about ⁠data centers."

Opposition from towns and counties in the Midwest and Northeast in recent months has led to the cancellation ​of data center ⁠developments over concerns of rising power prices, ​water impactand pollution from ‌accompanying power infrastructure.

(Reporting by ​Laila Kearney in Houston, Editing by Franklin Paul and Nia Williams)

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