It’s a new data world in New England. Maine’s new data center law, which passed the state legislature on April 14 and is headed to Gov. Janet Mills for approval, would suspend building large data centers until November 2027, allowing for a state analysis of potential environmental and energy impacts. Big time. That analysis, focused on centers with a load equal to or exceeding 20 megawatts, will be the responsibility of the Maine Data Center Coordination Council; legislation sponsor state Rep. Melanie Sachs, a Democrat, told IT Brew that the group will include members from the public and private sectors. “We need to have this conversation all together,” Sachs said. “That’s the point of the bill.” In an email to IT Brew, Sachs added that currently there are no plans for data centers of that size in the state. The only project currently in development, a LiquidCool Solutions center at the former Loring Air Force Base in Limestone, is “able to move forward within the 20-mw limit,” Sachs wrote. So, what happens next?—EH |