Introducing Green Data

By: Jason Bak, CEO, Green Data

Welcome to Green Data.

We've spent our careers building renewable energy projects.

For a long time, renewable power was seen as the green choice, not the economic one. That's changed.

Data centers have become one of the world's fastest-growing industries, and there's a clear economic imperative for them to choose renewables over conventional grid power.

The problem is clear: Massive AI data centers require enormous amounts of power and water, but interconnection queues are backed up for years. Water aquifers also can't sustain the demand.

Local communities are pushing back as utilities raise their power rates to fund grid buildouts, together with a well-founded fear that their taps could run dry.

These aren't side issues. They determine how long it takes to complete projects, or whether they get built at all.

This is why we're building Green Data.

When you build green from the ground up, you create a genuine competitive advantage, particularly in resource-constrained jurisdictions.

Across New Mexico and Texas, conventional data center operators are scrambling to retrofit for power and water they can't secure. These are slow, costly retrofits, and the delays and uncertainty flow directly to their clients.

Conversely, we're building from the start with behind-the-meter solar, battery storage, atmospheric water harvesting, closed-loop water cooling, green construction materials and countless other measures.

Together, these will significantly reduce our clients' time-to-power, offer them a superior cost structure, and eliminate their exposure to planned grid price increases.

For those of us who've spent our careers in renewables, the long-awaited alignment of economics and building green feels like a dream come true.

We believe the next generation of data center infrastructure will be led by people who understand energy first, and who recognize that building responsibly is also the fastest and most economical path forward.

This is the future we're building, and we're building fast.

Follow us for updates on our campuses in New Mexico and Texas, and for breaking developments in renewable-powered AI infrastructure.