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    Home » Utah Tightens Rules for Kevin O’Leary’s AI Data Center After Backlash | Invesloan.com
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    Utah Tightens Rules for Kevin O’Leary’s AI Data Center After Backlash | Invesloan.com

    May 30, 2026
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    Utah’s governor is all for new AI data centers — under certain conditions.

    After a massive data center project backed by “Shark Tank” investor Kevin O’Leary outraged many Utah residents, the governor is issuing new parameters around its development.

    In an executive order on Friday, Gov. Spencer Cox established a “higher bar for data center development in Utah.”

    “Utahns deserve confidence that water resources, air quality, utility rates, wildlife, and quality of life will be protected. This framework helps ensure that data center development aligns with Utah’s long-term interests and reflects Utah values,” Cox wrote in an X post.

    The framework contains eight principles that address a range of issues, including protecting water resources such as the Great Salt Lake and mitigating the impact on wildlife. Protecting utility rate payers, leaning into “human-led AI development,” and providing “transparent, meaningful and thorough opportunities for public comment” were also among the outlined principles.

    The executive order, which directs agencies to adopt the framework, is effective immediately.

    Today I signed an Executive Order establishing a higher bar for data center development in Utah.

    Utahns deserve confidence that water resources, air quality, utility rates, wildlife, and quality of life will be protected. This framework helps ensure that data center development… pic.twitter.com/yrASJOVvJi

    — Governor Cox (@GovCox) May 29, 2026

    Tensions in Utah have been high for months, particularly in Utah’s Box Elder County, where commissioners approved plans for the Stratos Project, a hyperscale data center campus spanning 40,000 acres, despite community opposition. The development, also dubbed “Wonder Valley” after O’Leary, who calls himself “Mr. Wonderful,” could reach 9 gigawatts of power when all is said and done.

    Many residents have fiercely opposed the development, crowding local council meetings and circulating petitions. Recently, some critics protested the data center outside the Utah State Capitol.

    While supporters say the data center will create jobs and spur economic growth, opponents are concerned about its environmental impact, noise levels, air quality, traffic, and the overall quality of life for nearby residents.

    O’Leary has defended the development several times. Earlier this month, he suggested — without evidence — that “professional protesters” orchestrated much of the controversy, that AI amplified some opinions, and that Chinese funding was fanning the outrage.

    A webpage for the Stratos Project said residents submitted over 2,000 questions and concerns that included “a mix of supportive and critical feedback.”

    In a May X post, Cox said the developers behind the Stratos Project agreed to use a phased approach to development, meaning they’ll need to apply for new permits for every planned addition.

    Data centers are becoming a major political issue ahead of November’s midterms. Communities across the country are rallying against them, pressuring local politicians. In February, residents in a New Jersey city, for instance, successfully blocked a data center development.

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