15 June 2023

Google Shows Plans for $1B Mesa Data Center / Google Data Centers’ Secret Cost: Billions of Gallons of Water

Context: “Redhawk” 

Overload Data Center Demands Encounter Low-Voltage Public Resistance


Here's one more instance of corporate-owned mainstream media dubious reporting intended to manipulate and to influence public opinion by Tom Scanlon, Managing Editor of the East Valley Tribune - it's all about the jargon used by city officials in "administrative reviews"
"Once the opt-in is approved, a project for the most part falls off the radar of public viewing of design plans and approval by boards. . ." 
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INSERT: POST FROM THIS BLOG 2019
The news broke here in Mesa yesterday, after a closed-door Executive Session of the Mesa City Council at a study session about 'a very big deal". However, back in March there was an un-notice hearing in front of the Planning & Zoning Board that tells the story and gives a narrative to rezone and qualify Red Hawk as a job-creation area - Red Hawk Employment Opportunity District
Very careful wording with this disclaimer more than three months ago:
Please read the official narrative and City Council staff report with the denial
"not known at this time"

The following is part of a post on this blog earlier this year
25 March 2019



RELATED CONTENT

INSERT: POST FROM THIS BLOG 2019

$1 billion data center coming to Mesa

Valley quickly becoming one of the hottest markets nationwide for new data center development

By   –  Reporter, Phoenix Business Journal
 Updated 

Mesa City Council has approved a deal to allow a California tech giant to acquire the land for a $1 billion data center in the Southeast Valley. The land is owned by a well-known Valley family.


Google Shows Plans for $1B Mesa Data Center 



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The city of Mesa approved zoning on the data center campus in 2019. It’s taken this long for the company to start coming forward with building design plans.
The project — called “Redhawk” — is planned on more than 185 acres near the northwest corner of Sossaman and Elliot roads. 
  • The Phoenix Business Journal Reports its first phase will include a 288,530-square-foot data center building with a utility switchyard, a medium voltage substation that services the data center (see photo), a site entrance with a security kiosk, public road improvements and an employee office building.
  • Per the development agreement between Google and the city of Mesa, the tech giant is on the clock to complete construction on the first phase of the project by July 2025, along with spending at least $600 million in capital expenditures and $180 million in taxable construction costs. 
  • Even though Google will not have to pay property taxes, the city’s economic development office estimates the entire state, county and local tax revenue over 25 years will be $156.57 million.

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Google Data Centers’ Secret Cost: Billions of Gallons of Water

To meet surging demand for online information, internet giant taps public water supplies that are already straining from overuse.

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In August 2019, the Arizona Municipal Water Users Association built a 16-foot pyramid of jugs in its main entrance in Phoenix. The goal was to show residents of this desert region how much water they each use a day—120 gallons—and to encourage conservation. 

“We must continue to do our part every day,” executive director Warren Tenney wrote in a blog post. “Some of us are still high-end water users who could look for more ways to use water a bit more wisely.”

A few weeks earlier in nearby Mesa, Google proposed a plan for a giant data center among the cacti and tumbleweeds. The town is a founding member of the Arizona Municipal Water Users Association, but water conservation took a back seat in the deal it struck with the largest U.S. internet company. Google is guaranteed 1 million gallons a day to cool the data center, and up to 4 million gallons a day if it hits project milestones. If that was a pyramid of water jugs, it would tower thousands of feet into Arizona’s cloudless sky.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google is building more data centers across the U.S. to power online searches, web advertising and cloud services. The company has boasted for years that these huge computer-filled warehouses are energy efficient and environmentally friendly. But there’s a cost that the company tries to keep secret. These facilities use billions of gallons of water, sometimes in dry areas that are struggling to conserve this limited public resource.

“Data centers are expanding, they’re going everywhere. They need to be built in a way that ensures they are not taking critical resources away from water-scarce communities,” said Gary Cook, global climate campaigns director at Stand.earth, an environmental advocacy group.. .

  • “The race for data centers to keep up with it all is pretty frantic,” said Kevin Kent, chief executive officer of consulting firm Critical Facilities Efficiency Solutions. “They can’t always make the most environmentally best choices.”

The Arizona town of Mesa, where Google plans a 750,000 square-foot data center, gets half its water from the drought-prone Colorado RiverA contingency plan was signed into law last year requiring states dependent on the river to take voluntary conservation measures. Still, Mesa officials say they remain confident about future supply while continuing to remind residents to limit their water consumption. “We do not have any immediate concerns,” said Kathy Macdonald, a water resources planning adviser with the city. In 2019, Mesa used 28 billion gallons of water, according to Macdonald. City officials expect that to reach 60 billion gallons a year by 2040, a demand Mesa is capable of meeting, she said.

Big companies like Google wouldn’t locate to the city if it couldn’t meet their water demands, Macdonald said. Mesa passed an ordinance in 2019 to ensure sustainable water use by large operations and fine them if they exceed their allowance.

Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2020-04-01/how-much-water-do-google-data-centers-use-billions-of-gallons

Project Red Hawk 
Employment Opportunity District Project Narrative [7 Pages]

Revised February 19, 2019  
Introduction
Pew & Lake, PLC is pleased to provide this project narrative and related materials to the City of Mesa in support of the proposed Red Hawk Employment Opportunity District (RHEOD). . .
The area is a minimum of 160 contiguous acres. 
As noted above, the Red Hawk property is approximately 187 acres and is currently designated in the Mesa 2040 General Plan as Employment Mixed Use Activity District.  Accordingly, this property is appropriate for designation as an Employment Opportunity District.

Amendment Procedure
Amendments to the approved RHEOD will follow the procedures outlined in Section 11-14-9 of the MZO. 
Phasing
The RHEOD is designed to accommodate the construction of buildings over time in response to technological advances and market conditions.
Playing the land market in the south East Valley has paid off for the speculators who moved in early. Although public records do not reveal exactly how much money the land dealers are making, court records and other documents show that tens of millions of dollars are changing hands in single transactions as the speculators sell off hundreds of acres they locked up a decade ago.Records also show the speculators are using some of that money to curry favor with the politicians who must approve their plans.
Development interests are the largest class of donors to political campaigns for city and town councils and county supervisors in the area -----------------------------------

30 June 2019

HUGE Give-Aways For Ga-Ga-GaZillion Tech Giant Google Data Center Here in Mesa?

That's right and it's as they like to say A BIG DEAL - it's up on the agenda for tomorrow's Mesa City Council Public Meeting.
According to mainstream media reports, the City Council is "primed" to approve it.
If you want some of the hype - and sketchy details - you know where you can go > Google Picks Mesa for Giant Data Center  
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"Technology giant Google is coming to Mesa, lured by a tax incentive agreement to build a massive data center in the emerging Elliot Road Technology Corridor. . . The Mesa City Council is primed to approve the Google development agreement at its meeting on Monday night."
HOLD ON! We've been kept in the dark about this in a confidentiality agreement with the company by city officials. We learned that tidbit after a closed-door Executive Session scheduled on the agenda at last Thursday's City Council Study Session.
To keep it quiet it was code-named Project Red Hawk. . . the deal isn't done until the City Council approves it.
As it turns out, there was little or no public involvement, engagement or participation in this project - even when it was disguised and hidden as Project Red Hawk in a City of Mesa Planning & Zoning Board Hearing on March 20,2019.
RED HAWK EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY DISTRICT (RHEOD)
< If the real truth gets told, there are few jobs that go with data centers. That's simply a fact.
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In the opening link for one Mainstream news story, Mesa Mayor John Giles is quoted as saying:
“In terms of a financial deal, this is home run. This is a great day, . . "  Giles said Google’s decision to build the data center in Mesa means that the Elliot Road Tech Corridor will be anchored at each end by one of the world’s largest tech companies, Apple and Google.
“There’s no city that would not be envious of that,’’ Giles said.
He said the project has been known to insiders by a code name, “Project Red Hawk,’’ for more than a year because Mesa signed a confidentiality agreement with Google.
Hmmm.... Time to disclose for Hizzoner! 

Data centers becoming dominant force in Mesa

By Tom Scanlon, Tribune Managing Editor


 

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