
Thomas & Hutton and Eagle Rock Partners are requesting a “special exception” from the Colleton County Board of Zoning Appeals (ZBA) to allow a data center on 850 acres of rural timberland.
The property is located on Cooks Hill Road, south of Walterboro in the ACE Basin. The site plan shows nine large industrial buildings on the property surrounded by wetlands. There are over 200 acres of wetlands on the property. The site plan suggests the complex would require the filling of 1.5 acres of wetlands.
The asks
1. Attend the Board of Zoning Appeals Public Hearing on December 18, 5 p.m., at the Old Jail Buillding, 109 Benson Street, Walterboro. Sign up to speak, share your concerns about the proposed data center, and encourage the Board of Zoning Appeals to DENY this request for a special exception.
2. Can't make the hearing? Email the Board of Zoning Appeals at planning [at] colletoncounty.org. Share your concerns about their action that could threaten the Ace Basin and your water, and impact your energy bills.
Talking points
Our concerns
- Data centers use massive amounts of energy. One large data center can use 100 MW of power, which is roughly equivalent to the annual energy used by nearly 80,000 homes.
- The computer systems inside a data center need to be cooled to function properly, usually using evaporative cooling. This requires a significant amount of clean, potable water. A large 50 MW data center can use more than 530 million gallons of water a year.
- While proponents suggest that large numbers of jobs would be created, it is very unlikely that this would happen. Data centers do NOT require large numbers of personnel, and those that they do require are often not local, but specialists brought in from elsewhere.
Zoning considerations
The property is currently zoned as a Rural Development Area that allows low intensity agricultural and residential uses. The proposed use is in no way compatible with the zoning designation. Further, it very likely would lead to additional non-compatible iintrusions.
Unanswered questions
- Where will the massive amounts of electricity come from, and who will pay to develop capacity to deliver it? Will cost be allocated to residential and small business ratepayers in the service area?
- How much water will be used, and where will it come from? What impact will it have on ground and surface water supplies? Who will pay to develop infrastructure to deliver it? What is the wastewater treatment plan?
- What will be done to mitigate noise pollution created by onsite generators and fans, a serious problem for residents near data centers?