Media & Culture

‘Hyperscale’ data center project in Utah — expected to generate and consume more power than entire state

A 9-gigawatt hyperscale project could consume more electricity than all of Utah.

Deep Dive

A massive hyperscale data center project in rural Box Elder County, Utah, led by Shark Tank investor Kevin O’Leary through his company O’Leary Digital (also known as the Stratos Project or Wonder Valley), is nearing final approval. The development spans roughly 40,000 acres of private land plus 1,200 acres of military and state-owned property, designed to host hyperscale data centers for tech giants like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google. It will generate its own power via natural gas from the Ruby Pipeline, starting at 3 gigawatts in the first phase and scaling to 9 gigawatts at full buildout—exceeding Utah’s current statewide electricity consumption.

Proponents highlight benefits including 2,000 permanent high-paying jobs, substantial tax revenue for Box Elder County (potentially $30 million initially, rising above $100 million annually), funding for modernization at Hill Air Force Base, and advanced water recycling technology that cleans and returns water to an aquifer feeding the Great Salt Lake with minimal net usage. To attract hyperscalers, the Military Installation Development Authority (MIDA) approved aggressive incentives: slashing the energy use tax from 6% to 0.5%, significant property tax rebates (with 80% initially directed back to the developer), and personal property tax relief on rapidly depreciating equipment. The project still requires final sign-off from the Box Elder County Commission, which rescheduled its vote after commissioners expressed concerns about the rapid timeline and sought more resident input and legal review. O’Leary has praised Utah’s pro-business speed and framed the initiative as critical for U.S. competitiveness against China in AI and data infrastructure.

Key Points
  • Project spans 40,000+ acres, generating up to 9 GW of natural gas power—more than Utah’s entire state consumption.
  • Promises 2,000 permanent jobs and $100M+ annual tax revenue for Box Elder County, plus water recycling for the Great Salt Lake.
  • MIDA approved aggressive incentives: 0.5% energy tax (down from 6%) and 80% property tax rebates to attract hyperscalers like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.

Why It Matters

This project sets a precedent for massive, self-powered data centers critical for AI infrastructure and U.S.-China tech competition.