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Kevin O’Leary believes his 10,000-acre data center can be ‘beautiful’
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Kevin O’Leary believes his 10,000-acre data center can be ‘beautiful’

Fast Company · May 31, 2026, 10:00 AM · Also reported by 4 other sources

If it ever gets built, the 7.5-gigawatt Stratos data center project in Utah would dwarf the artificial intelligence infrastructure that’s been built to date. Covering 10,000 acres of cattle-grazing land north of the Great Salt Lake, it would arguably be the largest data center in the world. That has many people in Utah concerned. The developer behind the project is Kevin O’Leary, the real estate investor familiar to many as a star of the ABC television show Shark Tank (and also the villain in the 2025 movie Marty Supreme). He says the increasingly competitive race for AI dominance among hyperscaler companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft is paving the way for giant data centers like Stratos to become the new normal. Cows graze in the area where the Stratos Project, a proposed data center, will be built in Box Elder County, on May 15, 2026, near Snowville, Utah. [Photo: Natalie Behring/Getty Images] “They’re all going to be built like this because the economics are so brutal, you need scale,” he says. Nonetheless, the prospect of a 10,000-acre data center has rankled some in the Salt Lake City area who worry about its energy use, impact on the land and, most sensitively, its potential to drain water from the Great Salt Lake. [Image: O’Leary Digital] The project received an initial approval on May 4 by the Box Elder County Commission, which oversees the unincorporated land on which the data center would be built, spurring further backlash. O’Leary and his company, O’Leary Digital, have brushed aside many of the resource concerns, saying the project would be creating its own energy generation capacity and not be using any water from the lake, relying instead on closed-loop cooling systems.He’s also found himself explaining to anyone who will listen that despite the project being widely reported as covering 40,000 acres, it’s actually a 10,000-acre data center set on a 40,000-acre site.

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