Energy Grid Strain
Enormous power demand from Project Tango threatens grid reliability and could increase utility rates.
Summary
A hyperscale data center of Project Tango's scale demands enormous, continuous electricity — often exceeding the power consumption of entire towns. This places extraordinary strain on the regional power grid, threatens reliability for existing customers, and could drive up utility rates for every household and business in Palm Beach County.
How Much Power Does a Data Center Use?
Modern hyperscale data centers consume between 30 and 150+ megawatts (MW) of power continuously. For context:
- 1 MW powers roughly 750-1,000 homes
- 100 MW powers roughly 75,000-100,000 homes
- A 3.69 million square foot facility at typical power densities could demand 200+ MW at full buildout
This is not peak or occasional demand — it is constant, 24/7 consumption. Data centers cannot tolerate even momentary power interruptions, requiring the grid to maintain maximum reliability at all times.
To put this in perspective, 200 MW is roughly equivalent to the total electricity demand of the entire city of Wellington, Florida (population ~65,000). Project Tango would effectively double the local power demand overnight.
Impact on Grid Reliability
Florida Power & Light (FPL) serves Palm Beach County and must maintain grid stability for all customers. Adding a massive new industrial load creates several risks:
- Transmission bottlenecks: The existing transmission infrastructure may not have the capacity to deliver hundreds of megawatts to a single point without upgrades
- Generation adequacy: FPL must either build new power plants or purchase additional electricity to meet the demand
- Grid stress during peaks: Florida's peak demand occurs during hot summer afternoons when air conditioning loads are highest. Adding a 200+ MW constant load reduces the reserve margin available for residential cooling
- Vulnerability to outages: When a large industrial load trips offline, it can create voltage and frequency instability affecting surrounding areas
FPL has already been managing increasing grid stress from population growth, electrification trends, and more frequent extreme weather events. A hyperscale data center would be one of the single largest loads on their system.
Rate Increases for Residents
When utilities must build new infrastructure to serve large industrial customers, the costs are typically spread across all ratepayers. This means Arden residents and other Palm Beach County households could see higher electricity bills to subsidize infrastructure serving Project Tango.
The pattern has played out in other regions:
- In Virginia's "Data Center Alley," residential electricity rates have increased as Dominion Energy invested billions in transmission infrastructure for data centers
- In Oregon, Portland General Electric sought a 17% rate increase partly attributed to data center load growth
- In Georgia, Georgia Power proposed a 12% rate increase driven in part by the infrastructure needed for new hyperscale facilities
Even if FPL negotiates a special industrial rate with the data center operator, the infrastructure investment (new substations, transmission lines, distribution upgrades) is capitalized into the rate base and paid by all customers over decades.
Renewable Energy Claims
Data center operators frequently claim their facilities will be powered by renewable energy. While these commitments are welcome, they require scrutiny:
- Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) allow facilities to claim "green" energy while actually consuming grid electricity generated from fossil fuels
- Solar and wind are intermittent — they cannot power a 24/7 data center without massive battery storage or gas-fired backup
- FPL's generation mix is approximately 70% natural gas, meaning most of the electricity actually flowing to the data center will come from fossil fuel combustion
- Building dedicated renewable capacity takes years and requires significant land
Backup Generation: Diesel Risk
Data centers maintain extensive backup diesel generator systems for grid outages. A facility of this scale would require dozens of large diesel generators, each capable of producing:
- Significant air pollution when operating (see Health Risks)
- Noise levels exceeding 100 dBA at the generator
- Fuel storage risks requiring thousands of gallons of diesel on site
These generators are tested regularly (typically monthly) and run during any grid disturbance, meaning the community would experience periodic diesel emissions even during normal operations.
What You Can Do
Our electric grid serves everyone — it should not be strained to serve one industrial project. Sign the petition and attend the April 23, 2026 County Commission hearing to demand a full grid impact assessment.
Take Action Now
Help protect our community from Project Tango. Sign the petition and make your voice heard at the April 23 hearing.
Sign the Petition