AI data center opponents block or delay projects worth $130B in 2026
Grassroots opposition groups have doubled to 833 across 49 states, creating a bottleneck that could ripple through crypto mining and AI infrastructure alike
In the first three months of 2026, opponents of AI data centers managed to block or delay at least 75 projects worth roughly $130 billion. That single quarter matched the total disruption for all of 2025.
The numbers come from Data Center Watch, which described the trend as a “structural shift” in how communities engage with large-scale computing infrastructure.
The opposition machine is scaling fast
Over the two years leading up to 2025, approximately $64 billion in data center projects faced some form of obstruction. Then 2025 saw that figure balloon to $130 billion for the full year. Now the same dollar amount of disruption has been compressed into a single quarter.
Grassroots opposition organizations have more than doubled, reaching 833 across 49 states by March 2026. Many of these groups are forming before projects are even formally proposed, mobilizing on rumors alone. Maryland, Ohio, and Texas have emerged as the most active battlegrounds.
Legislators are paying attention
Moratorium proposals on data center construction have surfaced in 14 states. At the federal level, Senators Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have backed a proposal targeting data center development.
Why crypto miners should be watching closely
This matters because the crypto mining industry spent the past two years diversifying into AI hosting and high-performance computing as a revenue hedge. Companies like Hut 8, Core Scientific, and others have pivoted significant capacity toward AI workloads, betting that hybrid models would provide more stable revenue than mining alone.
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