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Tucson cuts off water to Project Blue as Arizona data-center fights spread

Tucson cuts off water to Project Blue as Arizona data-center fights spread

After the council rejected the Amazon-linked complex over desert water use, the city revoked a meter for improper use; Arizona regulators still cleared two project wells

AI·Water· contested-result 生活如何改变·什么崩了 ·8 takes · ·rbtfl upd 2026年6月25日

Summary

The water backlash against data centers has hardened in Arizona. After the Tucson City Council unanimously rejected involvement with the Project Blue complex (originally Amazon-linked) over a region that gets 7–10 inches of rain a year, the city revoked a construction water meter when the contractor used ~two acre-feet of city drinking water for dust control the council had explicitly refused, and demanded payback. Arizona water regulators nonetheless approved two wells letting the site draw up to ~96.5 acre-feet/yr of groundwater. The standoff sits in a wider Western pattern (Georgia, California) of local fights over the campuses' thirst, echoing the Imperial Valley dispute and Europe's Spanish protests.

By the numbers

  • 7–10 in, average annual rainfall in the Tucson region.
  • ~96.5 acre-ft/yr, groundwater approved across Project Blue's two wells.
  • ~2 acre-ft, city drinking water improperly used, triggering the meter revocation.
  • ~20, US data-center projects cancelled or stalled amid local pushback (Q1 2026).

Why it matters

Water, not just power, is now a binding political constraint on AI siting in the arid West. A city cutting off a flagship campus signals that local control over scarce groundwater can stop or reroute multibillion-dollar builds.

What to watch

  • Whether Project Blue proceeds on groundwater alone after the city cutoff.
  • Litigation or referenda over data-center water rights in Arizona.
  • Spillover to other Western siting decisions.