Google and Intersect Power break ground on massive Meitner Energy Center in Texas
The co-located data center and clean energy complex will pair over 1 GW of renewables with an air-cooled facility that uses zero water withdrawals.
Google and Intersect Power have officially started building the Meitner Energy Center, a combined data center and renewable energy complex in the Texas Panhandle that pairs over 1 gigawatt of wind, solar, and battery storage with a new Google computing facility. The project, located in Gray and Roberts Counties near the city of Pampa, is designed to run entirely on clean energy from day one.
What’s actually being built
The Meitner Energy Center combines three types of clean energy, wind, solar, and battery storage, totaling more than 1 GW of capacity. The facility uses an air cooling system instead of traditional water-based cooling, eliminating the need for water withdrawals entirely.
Construction is expected to support up to 3,500 jobs through what’s being called the Caprock Workforce Hub, located in adjacent Wheeler County.
The project’s name pays tribute to Lise Meitner, the Austrian-Swedish physicist who helped discover nuclear fission but was famously overlooked for the Nobel Prize.
The Google-Intersect relationship
This is the second major collaboration between Google and Intersect Power. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, announced its acquisition of Intersect Power on December 22, 2025, in a deal valued at $4.75 billion in cash plus debt assumption. That acquisition formalized a strategic partnership that had been solidified in December 2024. The Meitner project itself has roots going back even further. Intersect originally proposed the concept in 2013, more than a decade before construction finally began.
Why this matters beyond Google
Most data centers are built first and then paired with renewable energy contracts after the fact. The co-location model that Google and Intersect are deploying at Meitner flips that sequence. By building generation and consumption together, the facility avoids the transmission losses and grid congestion issues that plague remote renewable energy purchases.
Microsoft disclosed that its global water consumption jumped 34% in fiscal year 2022, largely driven by data center expansion. Google’s decision to engineer water out of the equation at Meitner may signal a broader industry shift, especially as municipalities start pushing back against water-hungry tech facilities.
Earn with Nexo