Michigan is bracing for a surge in data center development, with at least 15 projects proposed across the state over the past year. Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed has vowed to protect communities from the potential impacts of these facilities, which could consume more electricity than the entire city of Detroit.
El-Sayed's "Our Communities, Our Terms" framework outlines a series of conditions that data center projects must meet before receiving approval. These include paying for their own energy demand, ensuring community transparency and involvement in approvals, guaranteeing energy reliability, and providing jobs for local residents. The plan also aims to protect water resources and prevent pollution.
The proposal targets investor-owned utilities like DTE Energy and Consumers Energy, which El-Sayed says have a history of rate hikes without improvements in service. His campaign argues that these companies are pushing to fast-track approvals without adequate oversight, leaving residents to face rising rates and persistent reliability problems.
El-Sayed's push for greater transparency and accountability is part of his broader effort to challenge corporate power and prioritize public health, affordability, and environmental protection. As a former Detroit health director and Wayne County health executive, he has built his Senate run around these core values.
With the Democratic primary approaching, El-Sayed's campaign is highlighting its commitment to ensuring that large infrastructure projects deliver measurable benefits to the communities that host them, rather than shifting costs onto residents. His opponents, U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, have been criticized for supporting tax exemptions for data center development without enforceable protections for ratepayers or the environment.
As Michigan's data center boom continues to grow, El-Sayed's "Our Communities, Our Terms" framework offers a potential roadmap for protecting communities from the negative impacts of these facilities.
El-Sayed's "Our Communities, Our Terms" framework outlines a series of conditions that data center projects must meet before receiving approval. These include paying for their own energy demand, ensuring community transparency and involvement in approvals, guaranteeing energy reliability, and providing jobs for local residents. The plan also aims to protect water resources and prevent pollution.
The proposal targets investor-owned utilities like DTE Energy and Consumers Energy, which El-Sayed says have a history of rate hikes without improvements in service. His campaign argues that these companies are pushing to fast-track approvals without adequate oversight, leaving residents to face rising rates and persistent reliability problems.
El-Sayed's push for greater transparency and accountability is part of his broader effort to challenge corporate power and prioritize public health, affordability, and environmental protection. As a former Detroit health director and Wayne County health executive, he has built his Senate run around these core values.
With the Democratic primary approaching, El-Sayed's campaign is highlighting its commitment to ensuring that large infrastructure projects deliver measurable benefits to the communities that host them, rather than shifting costs onto residents. His opponents, U.S. Rep. Haley Stevens and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, have been criticized for supporting tax exemptions for data center development without enforceable protections for ratepayers or the environment.
As Michigan's data center boom continues to grow, El-Sayed's "Our Communities, Our Terms" framework offers a potential roadmap for protecting communities from the negative impacts of these facilities.