Mayors Worldwide Collaborate to Limit Data Centre Strain on Energy and Water
Global Efforts to Address Data Centre Impact on Urban Resources
By Simon Jessop
International Collaboration and the Global Urban Data Centres Pact
LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - Mayors from 40 cities, including London, Phoenix and Melbourne, have agreed to work together to curb the growing strain the rapid growth in data centres is placing on electricity grids, water supplies and local communities, city leaders said.
A global surge in demand for computing power, much of it connected to artificial intelligence, is driving trillions of dollars in investment in new sites, sparking protests in countries from the United States to South Africa and Britain.
Objectives of the Pact
The Global Urban Data Centres Pact, due to be launched on Tuesday at London Climate Action Week, aims to set standards to ensure data centres use clean energy and all resources more efficiently, and are better integrated into urban planning, mayors from Phoenix and Melbourne told Reuters.
While the rules will be adapted to local conditions — cooling needs in Iceland differ from those in Manila — the mayors said the framework is meant to guide permitting and planning decisions, as well as negotiations with companies and governments.
Case Studies: Melbourne, Phoenix, and London
Melbourne's Growing Data Centre Footprint
Melbourne Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece said around 50 major data centres already operate in the city and were projected to account for roughly 10% of local power demand by 2030 and as much as 20% by 2040 in a city of 5.5 million people.
Energy and Water Usage Concerns
"Data centres are the biggest thing to hit the energy grid since air conditioning in the 1950s... where the rollout of air conditioning took decades, this is happening in a few short years," Reece said.
The centres could use around 20 billion litres of water a year, equivalent to 4% of the city's drinking supply, highlighting the pressure on local resources, he added.
'Race to the Bottom' and Regulatory Challenges
'RACE TO THE BOTTOM'
Reece said investment into data centres was happening at "breakneck speed", outpacing regulation, leaving cities at risk of a "race to the bottom" as governments compete to attract investment, sometimes bypassing environmental scrutiny.
Phoenix's Data Centre Boom
Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego said the city and surrounding region had 225 existing or planned data centres, with proposals that could double electricity demand.
Unprecedented Electricity Demand
Gallego said utilities that experienced decades of steady demand were now facing growth in a few years comparable to the previous century, driven largely by AI-related computing needs.
"The demand for electricity... is unprecedented," she said.
This has prompted disputes centred on noise, land use and safety risks from battery storage, alongside broader concerns about putting up infrastructure in residential neighbourhoods, she said.
London's Perspective on Responsible Growth
London Mayor Sadiq Khan, meanwhile, said in a statement that while AI and digital infrastructure would play "a major role in the future prosperity of cities around the world... residents are right to expect growth to be managed responsibly".
Environmental Impact and Broader Participation
Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Energy Use
Data centres account for an estimated 2.5% to 3.7% of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to the World Economic Forum — more than aviation — with their electricity demand rising faster than overall power consumption.
Global Cities Join the Pact
Coordinated by C40 Cities, a network of nearly 100 of the world's biggest cities working together on climate action, others to sign up include Barcelona, Chennai and Boise in the U.S. state of Idaho.
"In the race to be smart cities, we don't want to ruin the planet," Reece said.
(Reporting by Simon Jessop; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)


