Europe rolls out the red carpet for AI data centres, as water‑and‑energy backlash spreads

by · EUobserver

Data centres consume land, power and water. Local benefits can be thin. The political conditions for a European backlash are already forming

Opinion

Europe rolls out the red carpet for AI data centres, as water‑and‑energy backlash spreads

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By Alberto Alemanno,
Paris
,

Across Europe, the AI boom is taking physical form. Data centres are rising on industrial estates, former farmland and plots beside substations: windowless, fenced and humming with electricity.

Europe already hosts more than 3,000 data centres, and with €176bn expected to flow into capacity between 2026 and 2031, the next wave is moving onto industrial and power-secured land beyond the traditional hubs of Frankfurt, London, Amsterdam, Paris and Dublin.

Governments describe them as engines of digital sovereignty and economic modernisation.

In the US, these same facilities have already become political flashpoints.

Rural communities are packing town halls over electricity prices, water use, land, tax breaks and the unchecked power of Big Tech.

More than two dozen projects were blocked or delayed in January 2026 alone.

Microsoft abandoned a 244-acre facility in Wisconsin after local opposition; Amazon withdrew from Tucson, Arizona, over water concerns. Republican politicians in Trump country are turning against the president’s pro-AI stance, a critical development given that 78 percent of US counties dependent on agriculture voted for him in 2024.

The backlash is bipartisan, organised and growing.

Europe just rolls over

But not in Europe, where governments are competing in a subsidy-and-permitting race to attract the next wave of data-centre investment.

They offer faster permits, shorter consultation, cheaper land, tax breaks, grid access and assurances that local resistance will not slow projects down.

Italy approved a law in February 2026 simplifying authorisation procedures.

Germany is offering municipal tax incentives to attract AI data centres.

Aragón in Spain has created a fast-track permitting route through its ‘Project of General Interest’ framework, one Microsoft and Amazon are actively championing as a model to replicate continent-wide.

Brussels, meanwhile, is preparing a Cloud and AI Development Act to at least triple EU data-centre capacity within five to seven years, including by streamlining site selection and permits for sustainable projects.

What explains the different reception?

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Data centres consume land, power and water. Local benefits can be thin. The political conditions for a European backlash are already forming

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Author Bio

Alberto Alemanno is an academic, author and one of the leading voices on the democratisation of the EU. He is Democracy Fellow at Harvard University, Jean Monnet Professor at HEC Paris and founder of The Good Lobby.

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