AUSTIN, Texas — A majority of Texans oppose the construction of data centers in their communities, according to a new statewide poll that signals growing backlash against the rapid expansion of an industry that has made Texas the top market for data center development in the United States.
VAN ALSTYNE, Grayson County — straddling the Collin-Grayson county line about 50 miles north of Dallas, is home to an APS carbon-fiber composites plant employing 175 people.
The University of Texas/Texas Politics Project survey of 1,200 registered voters found 56% oppose data center construction in their area, while just 29% support it. Opposition was strongest in rural areas, where 62% of respondents said they opposed local data center development and only 22% were in favor. The poll carried a margin of error of plus or minus 2.83 percentage points.
The findings reflect mounting anxiety over the strain that power-hungry data centers place on the state's electric grid and water supplies. The Texas Tribune has identified 248 planned data centers across the state, with roughly half located in unincorporated areas of counties where local governments have limited regulatory authority. The state's sales tax exemption for data centers costs Texas more than $1 billion per year in forgone revenue.


