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william rowan hamilton metropolis council is go down to voter turnout midweek on whether to approve a moratorium on the development of data centres, as debate over such facilities has drawn mixed opinions and even protests.
Last week, the city's planning committee unanimously supported a motion to pause development of such facilities, which securely store, process and distribute digital information
Currently, the city has no rules specifically governing the building of data centres. If approved by council, a moratorium would give Hamilton time to develop regulations before companies building data centres set up shop.
The motion directs staff to prepare an interim bylaw that would restrict data centre development until current city rules are assessed and any recommendations are made to improve them, with data centre development in mind. The review would consider factors including energy and water use, noise and heat impacts, the motion says.
Hamilton councillors OK step toward moratorium on AI data centres
The growth of artificial intelligence (AI) has accelerated the development of physical facilities that store, process and run data and software. But it's also sparked protests across Canada, including over the amount of water and energy need to keep these sites up and running.
In Hamilton, there are at least two proposed data centre projects (both say they'd support acacemic research):
For musician and marketer Lliam Buckley, the ability to own and control one's data is key in the debate.
The Corktown resident, who manages the CoLodge art studio at James and Barton streets, said he wants digital systems to serve the public.
The federal government says data sovereignty is a goal in its push to develop data centres.
According to a June 16 statement from Hamilton West-Ancaster-Dundas MP John-Paul Danko, the DRAC pitch to build a research AI supercomputer on former industrial land would power research breakthroughs "while protecting Canadian intellectual property and reducing Canada’s current reliance on foreign compute infrastructure and private corporate AI services."
DRAC is a federally funded non-profit that supports digital research infrastructure. Its members include universities, institutions and research hospitals.
National group still going ahead with Hamilton data centre proposal
Buckley said he'd rather see data centres built by organizations like DRAC or s2e than by private companies. He noted that s2e has a track record of sustainable development.
"I think that not having these things built in our city doesn't make them go away. It just pushes them to another area, and it gives us less control over how they are built and how they are developed," Buckley said. "We aren't removing the harm. We're just kind of exporting it."
Logan McLean, a McMaster University student who lives near where s2e hopes to build, said that if data centre proponents plan to build environmentally friendly facilities, they should be OK with waiting to meet local regulations.
"Good projects shouldn't be afraid of good rules," said McLean, who's going into their fourth year of undergraduate studies and serves on the McMaster senate and students' union. "The just-trust-us approach could be irreversible."
In his experience, Hammerbacher said, regulations aren't inherently good for the environment and can unnecessarily hamper projects.
Right now, he said, it's too soon to tell what a moratorium on development could mean for the proposal, other than that "it would not have a positive impact."
Industry is moving at "lightning speed," he said, and by waiting, Hamilton risks putting itself at a disadvantage. What's more, there are already regulations in place for how much noise the proposed data centre could generate and how much power it could use, Hammerbacher said.
"Casting a wide net like this is actually going to hurt the community," Hammerbacher said, adding he doesn't think most people's fears about such facilities apply in s2e's case. For example, he said, the first phase of the data centre project it wants to launch in the former Spectator building will require no more power than the newspaper used when it ran out of Frid Street.
Hammerbacher co-signed a June 15 letter to the city planning committee with Gailene Tobin Vandenheuvel, CEO of McMaster Innovation Park (MIP), whose institution owns the former newspaper building where s2e wants to build a data centre. In the letter, they propose an exemption moratorium for "smaller scale data centres that make use of existing structural footprints established primarily to support research activities."
Lyndsey Beutin, a McMaster professor who teaches communications, warned of "university-washing," saying research is not inherently good and therefore not worth bypassing accountability measures for.
She said she wants to see more "meaningful" community consultation about s2e's proposal and has struggled to find information about it.
McMaster has stressed that the proposal is just that and any final decision would require approval from its board of governors.
Hammerbacher said that while he's happy to answer questions about the proposal, not all his partners are comfortable discussing a project that could be worth $1 billion while they're still sorting out details.
"I can stand here and say look at our background. Look at all these things that we're about," he said. "But I get it. How do you trust?"
Supersized data centres are coming to Canada. One province is at the epicentre
For Beutin, public support for a moratorium amounts to an "informed citizenry" asking questions of parties that could gain "a lot" of money.
"This is about fighting for Hamilton."
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