Rural Americans Worried About Data Center Impacts
Published: Friday, July 3, 2026
Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to reshape our economy and workforce. Data centers serve as the physical infrastructure for AI, but they come with notable costs and unknowns. These unknowns have generated consumer concerns around issues such as land use—especially farmland—and their impact on infrastructure needs, energy consumption and water use. Given the growing prevalence of data centers, the Food and Agricultural Policy Survey recently assessed U.S. consumers' concerns about the impact of data centers and AI. This article discusses the results and presents potential implications for rural economic development and community leaders.
Data centers physically house the servers, data, and infrastructure that support the internet, cloud computing and artificial intelligence. These facilities require reliable access to large amounts of electricity as they use a lot of power, and significant amounts of water to support the liquid-cooling systems needed to prevent overheating. Relevant to rural areas, modern data centers built to support AI require 500-800 acres of land, and in some instances, these data centers will require more land. Given this growing need for developable land, many rural data centers are built on farmland.
Data center development can potentially contribute to local economic development. They are capital-intensive developments that, in some instances, can generate significant property tax revenue for some local jurisdictions. That said, specific tax incentives available to data‑center owners and operators will determine the overall magnitude of the tax benefits. Not all data centers are the same, and the employment benefits of data centers vary, but the jobs impacts are often overstated.
Outside of the construction phase, the local employment impacts related to data center operation, maintenance and security are more modest. Data centers have also been shown to raise house prices. This can benefit property owners, but these increases can also increase costs for renters and prospective homeowners.
Many unknowns remain about the full impacts associated with data center growth and expansion. According to the UVA Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, by 2030 the energy requirements for data centers are projected to more than double in Illinois and triple in Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin. In addition to the greater demands on energy generation and transmission, these developments will also impact water usage, wastewater discharge and land use. Additionally, communities must also consider how these developments will affect air quality, noise pollution, and the economic tradeoffs associated with data center development.
Given these uncertainties, public views of data centers are mixed and may vary depending on where people live. In 2024, there were 115 data centers operating in Illinois—mostly located in the Greater Chicago area—and an additional 67 were expected to open by 2030. These data centers directly employed almost 10,000 people and generated $131M in state tax revenue and $127M for localities across the state (2024 dollars). However, the Pew Research Center reports that nationwide, 87% of existing data centers are in urban areas, but 67% of planned facilities are slated for rural communities. Moreover, 39% of planned data centers are in counties that currently have none. As these developments become more rural, data centers will increasingly affect farmland, as well as rural electricity and water systems.
While surveys show that many Americans are concerned about data centers—and often oppose having one built nearby—much less is known about how these views differ between rural and urban residents. To better understand these differences, the quarterly Food and Agricultural Policy Survey asked survey respondents to identify their concerns about data centers and AI (we conflate AI with modern data centers in this post). This survey was conducted online in February 2026 and reached approximately 1,000 U.S. adults who were representative of the country by region, income, age and gender.
Specifically, respondents were asked, "On a scale from 1 to 7, where 1=not at all worried and 7=extremely worried, how worried are you that Artificial Intelligence (sometimes called AI) will result in the following outcomes?"
Three outcomes were presented to survey respondents. "New data centers will impact electricity costs," had an average worry level of 5.17 out of 7. "Overuse of water" had an average worry level of 4.77 out of 7. Finally, "Agricultural land will be used for data centers" had an average worry level of 4.56 out of 7. All three levels of worry were above the midpoint (4). These are not the only potential concerns associated with either AI or modern data centers, but they are the issues that most consistently appear in news stories focused on rural and/or agricultural issues.
The survey results were organized according to the nature of the respondent's community, be it urban, suburban or rural (Q: "What best describes the community you live in?"), and our results revealed significant differences between urban and rural residents. Rural residents are more concerned about the potential impacts of data centers than urban and suburban residents. Figure 1 shows that, more than any other issue, the impact of data centers on electricity costs is most concerning to the average respondent. However, rural respondents were the most concerned about rising electricity costs, with an average worry level of 5.41 out of 7. Rural respondents were also more concerned about the impacts on agricultural land use and electricity costs than urban or suburban respondents. We did not find significant differences in levels of worry about water use, suggesting urban, suburban, and rural respondents had similar levels of concern about this impact.
Rural residents were more likely to be "very worried" about the impacts of AI/data centers across the board (Figure 2). Respondents who rated their level of worry a 6 or 7 on the 1-7 scale were considered "Very Worried." Fewer suburban residents were very worried about the use of farmland than either urban or rural respondents. By contrast, urban respondents were more likely to be very worried about water usage (44.5%) than rural or suburban respondents.
The gap between urban, suburban and rural responses was most pronounced in electricity costs. Of these three issues, the rising cost of electricity was the issue most likely to affect people's personal finances. Rural residents were 11 percentage points more worried than urban residents and 8 percentage points more worried than suburban residents. How data center electricity costs affect consumers varies by state. In regulated states like Virginia, utilities can build generation and grid infrastructure for data centers and recover those costs across all or specific ratepayers with regulatory approval. In partially deregulated states like Illinois, generation is market-based, so data centers can influence wholesale energy and capacity prices. In some instances, the increased generation costs required for a new or expanding data center may be borne by that customer. However, individual consumers may also bear costs through regulated transmission and distribution upgrades needed to serve large new loads.
The survey results show that many rural residents recognize the impacts associated with data center development, but they also suggest that their greatest concerns focus on the impacts that most directly affect their personal finances—particularly rising energy costs. While these individual-level concerns were significant, community leaders must take a broader perspective. In addition to the consumer impacts, they must also balance broader implications, including planning for future energy demand and infrastructure capacity, managing public finance and tax implications, evaluating opportunity costs relative to alternative land uses, and addressing land-use planning and zoning issues, among others.
Larger communities are more likely to have the capacity and resources to make these decisions, but many smaller and rural communities do not. In these instances, there is often an asymmetric relationship between rural communities and the companies, investors and experts working to advance these projects. Large companies that operate AI-scale data centers can bring specialized lawyers, engineers and financial analysts to structure these projects and site-location decisions. By contrast, many rural communities have limited decision-making capacity due to budget and staffing constraints, and they often rely on volunteer mayors or part-time elected officials. Often, they are simply not equipped to make these informed decisions or to effectively negotiate with companies that own data centers.
Smaller communities do not want to miss out on these economic development opportunities, as some communities have benefited from the contributions these developments have made to their local tax base. However, they also do not want to have to live with decisions that could negatively impact their future. At the very least, local leaders must better understand these potential issues so that they can make more informed decisions about siting data centers in their community and ask the right questions.
To aid their communities, Penn State Extension produced a guide to common questions that communities must ask about potential data center developments. These questions cover a wide range of issues, including power generation and usage, water usage, zoning and land use, workforce, and tax implications. In addition to asking the right questions, communities should also do their due diligence on individual developers by trying to understand what has happened in other communities—in terms of jobs, tax revenue, energy and water use, and infrastructure—where a prospective company built a similar data center.
Return to Top of Page