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Is Box Turtle the Open Source AMS we’ve been waiting for?


Multimaterial printing was not invented by BambuLabs, but love them or hate them the AMS has become the gold standard for a modern multi-material unit. [Daniel]’s latest Mod Bot video on the Box Turtle MMU (embedded below) highlights an open source project that aims to bring the power and ease of AMS to Voron printers, and everyone else using Klipper willing to put in the work.
A 3d Printed panda with black and white filamentThis isn’t a torture test, but it’s very clean and very cute.
The system itself is a mostly 3D printed unit that sits atop [Daniel]’s Voron printer looking just like an AMS atop a BambuLab. It has space for four spools, with motorized rollers and feeders in the front that have handy-dandy indicator LEDs to tell you which filament is loaded or printing. Each spool gets its own extruder, whose tension can be adjusted manually via thumbscrew. A buffer unit sits between the spool box and your toolhead.

Aside from the box, you need to spec a toolhead that meets requirements. It needs a PTFE connector with a (reverse) boden tube to guide the filament, and it also needs to have a toolhead filament runout sensor. The sensor is to provide feedback to Klipper that the filament is loaded or unloaded. Finally you will probably want to add a filament cutter, because that happens at the toolhead with this unit. Sure, you could try the whole tip-forming thing, but anyone who had a Prusa MMU back in the day can tell you that is easier said than done. The cutter apparently makes this system much more reliable.

In operation, it looks just like a BambuLabs printer with an AMS installed. The big difference, again, is that this project by [Armored Turtle] is fully open source, with everything on GitHub under a GPL-3.0 license. Several vendors are already producing kits; [Daniel] is using the LDO version in his video.

It looks like the project is well documented–and [Mod Bot] agrees, and he reports that the build process is not terribly difficult (well, if you’re the kind of person who builds a Voron, anyway), and adding the AFC Klipper Addon (also by [Armored Turtle]) was easy as pie. After that, well. It needs calibration. Calibration and lots of tuning, which is an ongoing process for [Daniel]. If you want to see that, watch the video below, but we’ll spoil it for you and let you know it really pays off. (Except for lane 4, where he probably needs to clean up the print.)We’ve featured open-source MMUs before, like the Enraged Rabbit Carrot Feeder, but it’s great to see more in this scene, especially something that looks like it can take on the AMS. It’s not the only way to get multimaterial– there’s always tool-changers, or you could just put in a second motion system and gantry.

youtube.com/embed/Akvasjkd3VU?…


hackaday.com/2025/06/24/is-box…



Repression gegen Budapest Pride: EU soll gegen digitale Verfolgung und Diskriminierung einschreiten


netzpolitik.org/2025/repressio…



James Senese – Chest Nun E’ A Terra Mia
freezonemagazine.com/articoli/…
Uno dei punti sui quali da sempre si trovano sulla stessa linea, addetti ai lavori, mezzi di informazione, suoi fan, appassionati di musica, è l’impareggiabile Coerenza di James Senese. In lui non c’è mai stata una separazione fra l’essere musicista e Il lato umano, sono una sagoma sola, schietta, espressiva, carismatica. È un figlio della […]
L'articolo James Senese – Chest Nun


Rutte e la nuova deterrenza. Industria, resilienza e coesione politica

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

Aprendo i lavori del Nato public Forum, organizzato dall’Alleanza Atlantica all’Aja, congiuntamente al Summit, è intervenuto oggi il segretario generale Mark Rutte, tracciando la direzione da seguire durante i due giorni di Summit previsti. La direzione da seguire secondo Rutte Il



Cyber security e innovazione: l’equilibrio è possibile


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Attacchi ransomware che chiudono gli ospedali, hacker che rubano ‘tesori’ di dati personali dalle banche, video deepfake che manipolano l'opinione pubblica. L'odierno panorama è in rapida evoluzione, ma cyber security e innovazione possono offrire soluzioni efficaci contro le minacce



Attacchi informatici, l’Iran potrebbe colpire le aziende


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
L’attacco, sferrato da Israele contro l’Iran lo scorso 13 giugno, si protrarrà per 15 giorni, secondo l’esercito israeliano. Ma gli analisti pensano possa durare molto di più, soprattutto dopo l’intervento diretto degli Stati Uniti (che ora spingono verso un accordo di pace). E potrebbe



Il Regno Unito sballotta Google?

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Google rappresenta oltre il 90% delle ricerche effettuate nel Regno Unito, ma ora l'autorità antitrust britannica sta valutando se assegnarle uno status particolare che le permetterebbe di rafforzare startmag.it/innovazione/il-reg…




Tregua. Israele denuncia attacco Iran, Teheran nega


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il presidente americano nella notte ha annunciato la fine dello scontro tra Israele e Iran. Netanyahu ha confermato di aver accettato lo stop agli attacchi ma Tel Aviv denuncia che nuovi missili sono stati lanciati da Teheran. Iran smentisce.
L'articolo Tregua. Israele denuncia attacco Iran, Teheran




Privacy e accessibilità: due pilastri per la libertà individuale nella società digitale


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Il Decreto legislativo 82/2022 che ha recepito l'European Accessibility Act segna un punto di svolta nell’integrazione dei diritti digitali, poiché impone l’accessibilità come condizione strutturale per



Perché Trump ha rimandato TikTok a settembre

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Con la guerra in Iran altri dossier sembrano essersi di colpo imposti sulla scrivania di Trump che per il terzo rinvio ha deciso di prendersi tutta l'estate: TikTok può infatti beneficiare di una ulteriore proroga di 90 giorni e continuare a



Data flows and digital repression: Civil society urges EU to reassess Israel’s adequacy status


On 24 June 2025, EDRi, Access Now and other civil society organisations sent a second letter to the European Commission, urging it to reassess Israel’s data protection adequacy status under the GDPR. The letter outlines six categories of concerns linking Israel’s data practices to escalating human rights violations in Gaza and the West Bank.

The post Data flows and digital repression: Civil society urges EU to reassess Israel’s adequacy status appeared first on European Digital Rights (EDRi).





Un anno fa, il 24 giugno 2024, accadeva l'impossibile: il giornalista Julian Assange veniva rilasciato dal famigerato carcere di massima sicurezza a Belmarsh, Londra.

Roberto Resoli reshared this.



OPEN LETTER: The European Commission must act now to defend fundamental rights in Hungary


With Budapest Pride set to take place on June 28, 2025, EDRi and 46 organisation are urging the European Commission to defend fundamental rights in Hungary so that Pride organisers and participants can safely exercise their right to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.

The post OPEN LETTER: The European Commission must act now to defend fundamental rights in Hungary appeared first on European Digital Rights (EDRi).



EU-Ratspräsidentschaft: Dänemark setzt Chatkontrolle wieder auf die Agenda


netzpolitik.org/2025/eu-ratspr…

reshared this

in reply to The Pirate Post

Die übliche Zermürbungs- und Ermüdungstaktik. Will man #Datenschutz und informationelle #Selbstbestimmung bewahren, muss man solche Vorhaben in jeder einzelnen Abstimmung abschmettern. Will man hingegen diese Dinge zugunsten eines Überraschungsapparates abschaffen, kann man das Thema wieder und wieder auf die Tagesordnung bringen und muss dann nur ein einziges Mal eine Abstimmung gewinnen, damit der Geist aus der Flasche ist, und der lässt sich nicht so leicht wieder einfangen. 🙄

#Chatkontrolle #Überwachung #surveillance #EUpol

reshared this



Genomics Market Comprehensive Statistics, Growth Rate, and Future Trends 2035


Release Date: 2025-Jun-24

A recently compiled research report offers a comprehensive overview of the Genomics Market, presenting well-structured insights into current market behavior, historical performance, and projections for the years ahead. This report is developed to support informed business decisions by offering relevant market intelligence, segment-level analysis, and region-specific breakdowns.

Included in the publication is a concise summary of data points covering past trends, present-day developments, and general observations about the structure of the market. The report also includes information on technology-related activities, product alignment, and performance category. It is designed for professionals seeking accessible and detailed knowledge and is available in both PDF and spreadsheet formats for ease of use.

The global genomics market size, valued at USD 38.77 billion in 2024, is expected to reach USD 46.06 billion in 2025 and USD 186.64 billion by 2035, representing a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.0% during the forecast period. The report presents these projections with supporting market data, providing a clear reference for understanding current conditions and segment activity.

Genomics Market Characterization

Market Scope and Market Size:

The report segments the global market based on Distribution by CAGR (Till 2035), Type of Deliverable, Type of Technology, Type of Process, Type of Study, Type of Application Area, End User, Geographical Regions.

This structured segmentation supports understanding of the Genomics Market from multiple angles. Readers can analyze trends based on crop usage, product type, and application method, while comparing region-specific contributions and market activity across different areas. The information helps frame each segment’s relevance and position within the overall market.

source of information: rootsanalysis.com/reports/geno…

Key Market Companies

Several prominent players are featured in the report, including 23andMe, Agilent Technologies, Bio-Rad Laboratories, BGI Genomics, Color Genomics, Danaher, Eppendorf, Eurofins Scientific (, GE HealthCare, Illumina, Myriad Genetics, Oxford Nanopore Technologies, Pacific Biosciences, QIAGEN, Quest Diagnostics, Roche, Thermo Fisher Scientific. These companies are profiled based on business reach, operational footprint, and product scope. The analysis also includes revenue performance, strategic direction, and product highlights for each company.

This section is designed to inform readers about how major companies are positioned within the Genomics industry, with a focus on sales performance, business expansion, and geographic engagement. It also highlights examples of recent activity across different regions, including portfolio extensions and new market entries.

Geographical Insights

Regional segmentation offers a breakdown of the Genomics Market by location, North America (US, Canada and Mexico) Europe (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, UK and Rest of Europe) Asia-Pacific (China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Russia, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Rest of the Asia-Pacific) Midde East and North Africa (Egypt, Saudi Arabia and UAE) Latin America (Argentina and Brazil). . Each region is reviewed with respect to historical performance, reported sales, and revenue share. The report presents these insights using a neutral and fact-based approach to ensure consistency across all regions.

Main Chapters in the Report:

Part 01: Market Overview
Part 02: Market Size, by regions
Part 03: Market Revenue, by countries
Part 04: Market Competition, by key players
Part 05: Company Profiles

Thank you for reviewing this market report. If you require a customized version or have any specific questions, please reach out to our team. We are happy to provide further assistance or deliver tailored content based on your strategic focus.

About Roots Analysis

Roots Analysis is a global research and consulting powerhouse specializing in Healthcare, Pharmaceutical, Biotech, Semiconductors, Chemicals and ICT industry. With over a decade of experience, they’ve supported more than 750 clients — spanning Fortune 500 companies, innovative startups, academic institutions, VCs, and strategic investors. Their expertise covers a wide set of domains, including market sizing, pricing trends, regulatory outlooks, competitive landscapes, and opportunity mapping across geographies.

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Website: rootsanalysis.com/



Madrid chiede all’UE lo stop al trattato di associazione con Israele


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il governo spagnolo chiede all'UE la sospensione del trattato di associazione con Israele ma movimenti filopalestinesi e partiti di sinistra pretendono da Pedro Sànchez azioni concrete e urgenti. Intanto Bruxelles rimanda ogni decisione su Israele
L'articolo Madrid chiede all’UE lo stop al



Vi presento il fotolibro del futuro

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Dall'artigianato alla rivoluzione digitale: come sostenibilità, web-to-print e tecnologie immersive stanno trasformando l’esperienza del fotolibro in un viaggio tra fisico e virtuale

startmag.it/innovazione/il-fot…




L’Iran attacca le basi americane nel Golfo. Trump annuncia il cessate il fuoco


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Il presidente americano nella notte ha annunciato la fine dello scontro tra Israele e Iran. Ieri Teheran ha lanciato missili contro il quartier generale del comando regionale Usa a Al-Udeid, in Qatar e altre basi americane
L'articolo L’Iran attacca



La Rai taglia l’approfondimento: protesta a Napoli il 27 giugno


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/06/la-rai-…
Cdr Approfondimento Rai: «Serve una regolare testata nelle Reti per tutelare l’informazione e impedire colpi di mano».Coordinamento Programmi Rai – Giusto Contratto: «Le redazioni dei



Ermanno “scrip” Ferretti: così ironia e passione per la filosofia aiutano a dialogare

@Politica interna, europea e internazionale

Mi è stato presentato da un caro amico (Piero Celoria, ex compagno di liceo a Valsalice e appassionato di filosofia), insegna nei licei e in questi giorni nei quali la maturità e gli studenti sono in primo piano, tout se tient, penso





Researchers found Meta’s popular Llama 3.1 70B has a capacity to recite passages from 'The Sorcerer's Stone' at a rate much higher than could happen by chance.

Researchers found Meta’s popular Llama 3.1 70B has a capacity to recite passages from x27;The Sorcererx27;s Stonex27; at a rate much higher than could happen by chance.#AI #Meta #llms

#ai #meta #x27 #LLMs


#USA-#Iran, la guerra degli specchi


altrenotizie.org/primo-piano/1…


L’Iran attacca le basi americane in Medioriente


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Missili contro la base militare americana di Al-Udeid, in Qatar. L'allarme suona anche nelle basi dell'Iraq.
L'articolo L’Iran attacca le basi americane in Medioriente proviene da Pagine Esteri.

pagineesteri.it/2025/06/23/med…





Here is the video archive for our FOIA Forum where we explained how we got records about Massive Blue, a company selling AI personas to cops.#FOIAForum



Details about how Meta's nearly Manhattan-sized data center will impact consumers' power bills are still secret.

Details about how Metax27;s nearly Manhattan-sized data center will impact consumersx27; power bills are still secret.#AI


'A Black Hole of Energy Use': Meta's Massive AI Data Center Is Stressing Out a Louisiana Community


A massive data center for Meta’s AI will likely lead to rate hikes for Louisiana customers, but Meta wants to keep the details under wraps.

Holly Ridge is a rural community bisected by US Highway 80, gridded with farmland, with a big creek—it is literally named Big Creek—running through it. It is home to rice and grain mills and an elementary school and a few houses. Soon, it will also be home to Meta’s massive, 4 million square foot AI data center hosting thousands of perpetually humming servers that require billions of watts of energy to power. And that energy-guzzling infrastructure will be partially paid for by Louisiana residents.

The plan is part of what Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said would be “a defining year for AI.” On Threads, Zuckerberg boasted that his company was “building a 2GW+ datacenter that is so large it would cover a significant part of Manhattan,” posting a map of Manhattan along with the data center overlaid. Zuckerberg went on to say that over the coming years, AI “will drive our core products and business, unlock historic innovation, and extend American technology leadership. Let's go build! 💪”

Mark Zuckerberg (@zuck) on Threads
This will be a defining year for AI. In 2025, I expect Meta AI will be the leading assistant serving more than 1 billion people, Llama 4 will become the leading state of the art model, and we’ll build an AI engineer that will start contributing increasing amounts of code to our R&D efforts. To power this, Meta is building a 2GW+ datacenter that is so large it would cover a significant part of Manhattan.
Threads


What Zuckerberg did not mention is that "Let's go build" refers not only to the massive data center but also three new Meta-subsidized, gas power plants and a transmission line to fuel it serviced by Entergy Louisiana, the region’s energy monopoly.

Key details about Meta’s investments with the data center remain vague, and Meta’s contracts with Entergy are largely cloaked from public scrutiny. But what is known is the $10 billion data center has been positioned as an enormous economic boon for the area—one that politicians bent over backward to facilitate—and Meta said it will invest $200 million into “local roads and water infrastructure.”

A January report from NOLA.com said that the the state had rewritten zoning laws, promised to change a law so that it no longer had to put state property up for public bidding, and rewrote what was supposed to be a tax incentive for broadband internet meant to bridge the digital divide so that it was only an incentive for data centers, all with the goal of luring in Meta.

But Entergy Louisiana’s residential customers, who live in one of the poorest regions of the state, will see their utility bills increase to pay for Meta’s energy infrastructure, according to Entergy’s application. Entergy estimates that amount will be small and will only cover a transmission line, but advocates for energy affordability say the costs could balloon depending on whether Meta agrees to finish paying for its three gas plants 15 years from now. The short-term rate increases will be debated in a public hearing before state regulators that has not yet been scheduled.

The Alliance for Affordable Energy called it a “black hole of energy use,” and said “to give perspective on how much electricity the Meta project will use: Meta’s energy needs are roughly 2.3x the power needs of Orleans Parish … it’s like building the power impact of a large city overnight in the middle of nowhere.”

404 Media reached out to Entergy for comment but did not receive a response.

By 2030, Entergy’s electricity prices are projected to increase 90 percent from where they were in 2018, although the company attributes much of that to damage to infrastructure from hurricanes. The state already has a high energy cost burden in part because of a storm damage to infrastructure, and balmy heat made worse by climate change that drives air conditioner use. The state's homes largely are not energy efficient, with many porous older buildings that don’t retain heat in the winter or remain cool in the summer.

“You don't just have high utility bills, you also have high repair costs, you have high insurance premiums, and it all contributes to housing insecurity,” said Andreanecia Morris, a member of Housing Louisiana, which is opposed to Entergy’s gas plant application. She believes Meta’s data center will make it worse. And Louisiana residents have reasons to distrust Entergy when it comes to passing off costs of new infrastructure: in 2018, the company’s New Orleans subsidiary was caught paying actors to testify on behalf of a new gas plant. “The fees for the gas plant have all been borne by the people of New Orleans,” Morris said.

In its application to build new gas plants and in public testimony, Entergy says the cost of Meta’s data center to customers will be minimal and has even suggested Meta’s presence will make their bills go down. But Meta’s commitments are temporary, many of Meta’s assurances are not binding, and crucial details about its deal with Entergy are shielded from public view, a structural issue with state energy regulators across the country.

AI data centers are being approved at a breakneck pace across the country, particularly in poorer regions where they are pitched as economic development projects to boost property tax receipts, bring in jobs and where they’re offered sizable tax breaks. Data centers typically don’t hire many people, though, with most jobs in security and janitorial work, along with temporary construction work. And the costs to the utility’s other customers can remain hidden because of a lack of scrutiny and the limited power of state energy regulators. Many data centers—like the one Meta is building in Holly Ridge—are being powered by fossil fuels. This has led to respiratory illness and other health risks and emitting greenhouse gasses that fuel climate change. In Memphis, a massive data center built to launch a chatbot for Elon Musks’ AI company is powered by smog-spewing methane turbines, in a region that leads the state for asthma rates.

“In terms of how big these new loads are, it's pretty astounding and kind of a new ball game,” said Paul Arbaje, an energy analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists, which is opposing Entergy’s proposal to build three new gas-powered plants in Louisiana to power Meta’s data center.

Entergy Louisiana submitted a request to the state’s regulatory body to approve the construction of the new gas-powered plants that would create 2.3 gigawatts of power and cost $3.2 billion in the 1440 acre Franklin Farms megasite in Holly Ridge, an unincorporated community of Richland Parish. It is the first big data center announced since Louisiana passed large tax breaks for data centers last summer.

In its application to the public utility commission for gas plants, Entergy says that Meta has a planned investment of $5 billion in the region to build the gas plants in Richland Parish, Louisiana, where it claims in its application that the data center will employ 300-500 people with an average salary of $82,000 in what it points out is “a region of the state that has long struggled with a lack of economic development and high levels of poverty.” Meta’s official projection is that it will employ more than 500 people once the data center is operational. Entergy plans for the gas plants to be online by December 2028.

In testimony, Entergy officials refused to answer specific questions about job numbers, saying that the numbers are projections based on public statements from Meta.

A spokesperson for Louisiana’s Economic Development told 404 Media in an email that Meta “is contractually obligated to employ at least 500 full-time employees in order to receive incentive benefits.”

When asked about jobs, Meta pointed to a public facing list of its data centers, many of which the company says employ more than 300 people. A spokesperson said that the projections for the Richland Parish site are based on the scale of the 4 million square foot data center. The spokesperson said the jobs will include “engineering and other technical positions to operational roles and our onsite culinary staff.”

When asked if its job commitments are binding, the spokesperson declined to answer, saying, “We worked closely with Richland Parish and Louisiana Economic Development on mutually beneficial agreements that will support long-term growth in the area.”

Others are not as convinced. “Show me a data center that has that level of employment,” says Logan Burke, executive director of the Alliance for Affordable Energy in Louisiana.

Entergy has argued the new power plants are necessary to satiate the energy need from Meta’s massive hyperscale data center, which will be Meta’s largest data center and potentially the largest data center in the United States. It amounts to a 25 percent increase in Entergy Louisiana’s current load, according to the Alliance for Affordable Energy.

Entergy requested an exemption from a state law meant to ensure that it develops energy at the lowest cost by issuing a public request for proposals, claiming in its application and testimony that this would slow them down and cause them to lose their contracts with Meta.

Meta has agreed to subsidize the first 15 years of payments for construction of the gas plants, but the plant’s construction is being financed over 30 years. At the 15 year mark, its contract with Entergy ends. At that point, Meta may decide it doesn’t need three gas plants worth of energy because computing power has become more efficient or because its AI products are not profitable enough. Louisiana residents would be stuck with the remaining bill.

“It's not that they're paying the cost, they're just paying the mortgage for the time that they're under contract,” explained Devi Glick, an electric utility analyst with Synapse Energy.

When asked about the costs for the gas plants, a Meta spokesperson said, “Meta works with our utility partners to ensure we pay for the full costs of the energy service to our data centers.” The spokesperson said that any rate increases will be reviewed by the Louisiana Public Service Commission. These applications, called rate cases, are typically submitted by energy companies based on a broad projection of new infrastructure projects and energy needs.

Meta has technically not finalized its agreement with Entergy but Glick believes the company has already invested enough in the endeavor that it is unlikely to pull out now. Other companies have been reconsidering their gamble on AI data centers: Microsoft reversed course on centers requiring a combined 2 gigawatts of energy in the U.S. and Europe. Meta swept in to take on some of the leases, according to Bloomberg.

And in the short-term, Entergy is asking residential customers to help pay for a new transmission line for the gas plants at a cost of more than $500 million, according to Entergy’s application to Louisiana’s public utility board. In its application, the energy giant said customers’ bills will only rise by $1.66 a month to offset the costs of the transmission lines. Meta, for its part, said it will pay up to $1 million a year into a fund for low-income customers. When asked about the costs of the new transmission line, a Meta spokesperson said, “Like all other new customers joining the transmission system, one of the required transmission upgrades will provide significant benefits to the broader transmission system. This transmission upgrade is further in distance from the data center, so it was not wholly assigned to Meta.”

When Entergy was questioned in public testimony on whether the new transmission line would need to be built even without Meta’s massive data center, the company declined to answer, saying the question was hypothetical.

Some details of Meta’s contract with Entergy have been made available to groups legally intervening in Entergy’s application, meaning that they can submit testimony or request data from the company. These parties include the Alliance for Affordable Energy, the Sierra Club and the Union of Concerned Scientists.

But Meta—which will become Entergy’s largest customer by far and whose presence will impact the entire energy grid—is not required to answer questions or divulge any information to the energy board or any other parties. The Alliance for Affordable Energy and Union of Concerned Scientists attempted to make Meta a party to Entergy’s application—which would have required it to share information and submit to questioning—but a judge denied that motion on April 4.

The public utility commissions that approve energy infrastructure in most states are the main democratic lever to assure that data centers don’t negatively impact consumers. But they have no oversight over the tech companies running the data centers or the private companies that build the centers, leaving residential customers, consumer advocates and environmentalists in the dark. This is because they approve the power plants that fuel the data centers but do not have jurisdiction over the data centers themselves.

“This is kind of a relic of the past where there might be some energy service agreement between some large customer and the utility company, but it wouldn't require a whole new energy facility,” Arbaje said.

A research paper by Ari Peskoe and Eliza Martin published in March looked at 50 regulatory cases involving data centers, and found that tech companies were pushing some of the costs onto utility customers through secret contracts with the utilities. The paper found that utilities were often parroting rhetoric from AI boosting politicians—including President Biden—to suggest that pushing through permitting for AI data center infrastructure is a matter of national importance.

“The implication is that there’s no time to act differently,” the authors wrote.

In written testimony sent to the public service commission, Entergy CEO Phillip May argued that the company had to bypass a legally required request for proposals and requirement to find the cheapest energy sources for the sake of winning over Meta.

“If a prospective customer is choosing between two locations, and if that customer believes that location A can more quickly bring the facility online than location B, that customer is more likely to choose to build at location A,” he wrote.

Entergy also argues that building new gas plants will in fact lower electricity bills because Meta, as the largest customer for the gas plants, will pay a disproportionate share of energy costs. Naturally, some are skeptical that Entergy would overcharge what will be by far their largest customer to subsidize their residential customers. “They haven't shown any numbers to show how that's possible,” Burke says of this claim. Meta didn’t have a response to this specific claim when asked by 404 Media.

Some details, like how much energy Meta will really need, the details of its hiring in the area and its commitment to renewables are still cloaked in mystery.

“We can't ask discovery. We can't depose. There's no way for us to understand the agreement between them without [Meta] being at the table,” Burke said.

It’s not just Entergy. Big energy companies in other states are also pushing out costly fossil fuel infrastructure to court data centers and pushing costs onto captive residents. In Kentucky, the energy company that serves the Louisville area is proposing 2 new gas plants for hypothetical data centers that have yet to be contracted by any tech company. The company, PPL Electric Utilities, is also planning to offload the cost of new energy supply onto its residential customers just to become more competitive for data centers.

“It's one thing if rates go up so that customers can get increased reliability or better service, but customers shouldn't be on the hook to pay for new power plants to power data centers,” Cara Cooper, a coordinator with Kentuckians for Energy Democracy, which has intervened on an application for new gas plants there.

These rate increases don’t take into account the downstream effects on energy; as the supply of materials and fuel are inevitably usurped by large data center load, the cost of energy goes up to compensate, with everyday customers footing the bill, according to Glick with Synapse.

Glick says Entergy’s gas plants may not even be enough to satisfy the energy needs of Meta’s massive data center. In written testimony, Glick said that Entergy will have to either contract with a third party for more energy or build even more plants down the line to fuel Meta’s massive data center.

To fill the gap, Entergy has not ruled out lengthening the life of some of its coal plants, which it had planned to close in the next few years. The company already pushed back the deactivation date of one of its coal plants from 2028 to 2030.

The increased demand for gas power for data centers has already created a widely-reported bottleneck for gas turbines, the majority of which are built by 3 companies. One of those companies, Siemens Energy, told Politico that turbines are “selling faster than they can increase manufacturing capacity,” which the company attributed to data centers.

Most of the organizations concerned about the situation in Louisiana view Meta’s massive data center as inevitable and are trying to soften its impact by getting Entergy to utilize more renewables and make more concrete economic development promises.

Andreanecia Morris, with Housing Louisiana, believes the lack of transparency from public utility commissions is a bigger problem than just Meta. “Simply making Meta go away, isn't the point,” Morris says. “The point has to be that the Public Service Commission is held accountable.”

Burke says Entergy owns less than 200 megawatts of renewable energy in Louisiana, a fraction of the fossil fuels it is proposing to fuel Meta’s center. Entergy was approved by Louisiana’s public utility commission to build out three gigawatts of solar energy last year , but has yet to build any of it.

“They're saying one thing, but they're really putting all of their energy into the other,” Burke says.

New gas plants are hugely troubling for the climate. But ironically, advocates for affordable energy are equally concerned that the plants will lie around disused - with Louisiana residents stuck with the financing for their construction and upkeep. Generative AI has yet to prove its profitability and the computing heavy strategy of American tech companies may prove unnecessary given less resource intensive alternatives coming out of China.

“There's such a real threat in such a nascent industry that what is being built is not what is going to be needed in the long run,” said Burke. “The challenge remains that residential rate payers in the long run are being asked to finance the risk, and obviously that benefits the utilities, and it really benefits some of the most wealthy companies in the world, But it sure is risky for the folks who are living right next door.”

The Alliance for Affordable Energy expects the commission to make a decision on the plants this fall.


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