Good morning.

Wednesday in Whitewater will be sunny with a high of 37. Sunrise is 6:57 and sunset is 5:20 for 10 hours 21 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waning crescent with 30.4 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
Whitewater’s Comprehensive Plan Work Group meets at 4 PM and the Equal Opportunity Commission at 5 PM.
On this day in 1970, Japan launches Ohsumi, becoming the fourth nation to put an object into orbit using its own booster.
This libertarian blogger has written about data centers before, arguing for a minimal set of regulations to allow the industry to develop, community by community. See Data Centers, Gubernatorial Candidates’ Views on Data Centers, and Microsoft’s View on Wisconsin Data Centers.
However one thinks about this issue, it’s not going away:
At a public hearing held by the Wisconsin Public Service Commission Tuesday, dozens of Wisconsin residents decried the effects massive data centers could have on the state’s electricity rates and ability to adopt renewable energy sources.
The three-member PSC is considering a proposal from the Wisconsin Electric Power Company to establish a tariff system for providing electricity to massive data centers. Under the proposal, “very large” customers that would be subject to the tariff would have a combined energy load of 500 megawatts — the equivalent of powering about 400,000 homes.
The first phase of Microsoft’s $13.3 billion data center project in Mount Pleasant is projected to require 450 megawatts.
Critics of the proposal say that under this system, regular consumers will still be on the hook for 25% of the infrastructure costs associated with increasing the state’s energy load.
Over the past year, the growth of data center development in Wisconsin has spurred an increasingly tense debate. Local governments have been tempted to allow their construction as a source of property tax revenue while local residents raise concerns over energy and water use, the conversion of historical farmland, the ethics of artificial intelligence and long-term environmental impacts.
The massive energy needs of data centers have become the central issue in the debate, with people in Wisconsin and around the country questioning how to manage the demands of giant corporations seeking to use orders of magnitude more energy than is currently being produced.
See Henry Redman, Wisconsin Public Service Commission data center hearing draws public outcry, Wisconsin Examiner, February 10, 2026.
There’s value for a blogger simply in spotting political trends, as there is value for a meteorologist to spot trends in weather and climate.
Well, data centers are surely one of those trends, with both economic and political implications combined.
Buddhist monks conclude 15-week ‘Walk for Peace’ in Washington:
