价值 1300 亿美元的人工智能数据中心刚刚被封锁。
Where Does the AI Boom Go Now $130 Billion in AI Data Centers were Just Blocked. Where Does the AI Boom Go Now · Oilprice.com Charles Kennedy Wed, July 8, 2026 at 5:00 PM PDT 12 min read GOOGL -1.39% GOOG -1.35% META -2.02% MU +1.11% In September, Google walked away from a $1 billion data center outside Indianapolis, pulling its Franklin Township proposal minutes before the city-county council was set to vote it down. It wasn't an isolated incident.目前,美国各地社区已在 2026 年前三个月阻止或推迟了价值超过 1300 亿美元的人工智能数据中心建设,拒绝了行业大佬们认为可以在任何地方建造的项目。
This is the problem Bitzero (Nasdaq: AIBZ) spent the last four years quietly engineering its way around. The company now controls more than a gigawatt of low-cost, clean power capacity across Norway and Finland,, permitted before the backlash started and welcomed by the communities around it. In May, the company signed a binding letter for a 15-year lease worth roughly $2.6 billion, and on June 9 it began trading on the Nasdaq. The AI capital being rejected at home has to go somewhere it's allowed to build, and Bitzero has keyed in on the short list where there's cheap, abundant power to drive AI's next wave. Why Big Tech Keeps Getting Voted Down The rejections are coming faster now, and they seem to follow the same general script. In Tucson, Arizona, the city council voted unanimously to oppose "Project Blue," a $3.6 billion Amazon campus, after similar fears about water use and rising costs boiled over. The complaints rhyme from town to town: higher electricity bills to cover the grid upgrades a hyperscaler like Amazon or Google needs, and millions of gallons of water routed to cooling. Fights that would have been a formality two years ago now stretch on for months in Virginia, Texas, Indiana, and Georgia. Elected officials are adding to the friction as well. Lawmakers introduced more than 300 data center bills in the first six weeks of 2026, and 14 states floated outright moratoriums on new construction. For a developer, that means the rules can change after the land is already bought and the capital committed. But while Big Tech scrambles to find a solution, Bitzero has already spent years laying the groundwork. That is why construction at its Nordic sites are racing ahead on schedule while comparable U.S. projects sit in limbo, and why a backlash that looks like a major crisis for the hyperscalers may have created an opening for Bitzero. For most of the AI boom, the binding constraint was hardware, with everyone in Silicon Valley scrambling for Nvidia's chips. Then it became electricity, as the grid filled up and new power took years to connect. The constraint now is simpler to describe and harder to solve: putting that power and those chips somewhere a community will actually approve. Even a company with the funding secured and the utility on board can lose two years, or the whole project, to a single council vote it never saw coming. Google had both in Indianapolis, and it still walked away. An AI Infrastructure Company Built Approval-First Bitzero (Nasdaq: AIBZ) designed its business around earning that approval first before anything else. As CEO Mohammed Bakhashwain has put it plainly: the company locks down power access, grid positioning, and pricing frameworks first, then builds on top of what it has already se