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U.S. Data Center Construction Digest – April 15, 2026

This week’s activity shows continued hyperscale acceleration, but the friction is getting louder—power constraints, permitting risk, and political pressure are now directly shaping what gets built.

Project & Development Activity

Developer / Project Location Scale Investment & Timeline Status Notes
AWS “Project Houdini” U.S. (multi-site) Not disclosed Not disclosed Active (construction strategy shift) AWS pushing modular/prefab builds to cut delivery timelines by months—clear signal speed is now a competitive advantage.
“Project Baccara” Maricopa County, AZ 160-acre site Not disclosed Recommended for approval Large-scale campus moving through approvals in a power-constrained but pro-growth market.
AWS Mississippi Expansion Mississippi (multiple counties) Hyperscale (multi-site) Up to $25B Expansion / scaling Major capital deployment into secondary market—aligned with shift away from saturated Tier 1 regions.

 

Policy, Regulation & Market Constraints

Policy / Event Location Impact Status Notes
National anti–data center pushback U.S. (multi-state) Project delays / cancellations Escalating ~$156B in projects impacted by opposition tied to energy, cost, and environmental concerns.
Illinois “POWER Act” Illinois Increased regulation (energy + water disclosure) Proposed Would force large data centers to supply their own clean energy and report usage—material cost implications.
Colorado moratorium discussions Colorado Potential restrictions Under debate Growing resistance tied to land use, health concerns, and infrastructure strain.

 

Trends and Observations

1) Speed is now a differentiator
AWS moving to prefab construction isn’t incremental—it’s a response to backlog and power queue delays. Whoever delivers capacity fastest wins.

2) Secondary markets are no longer optional—they’re the strategy
Mississippi, Arizona, Midwest—this is where projects are landing because Northern Virginia, Silicon Valley, and other Tier 1s are constrained.

3) Regulation is no longer hypothetical
Illinois, Colorado, and broader national pushback show this is shifting from local zoning fights to structural policy risk. Expect longer timelines and higher compliance costs.

4) The real bottleneck is execution, not demand
Capital is there. Demand is obvious. But supply chain, interconnection queues, and politics are killing timelines. That’s why half the pipeline isn’t moving.

5) Hyperscalers are separating from everyone else
AWS and peers are solving construction and power internally (modular builds, dedicated energy strategies). Smaller developers don’t have that leverage—and it’s starting to show.