Community/Built With the Communities We Power

Good power,good neighbors.

We build energy and digital infrastructure in real communities, and we measure success by the jobs, tax revenue, and trust we leave behind. Here is what that commitment looks like, and answers to the questions we hear most.

Powering Prosperity, Locally

We invest where we build: creating skilled construction and permanent operations jobs, prioritizing local New Mexico and West Texas trades, and partnering with community colleges to train the workforce of the future.

Water Stewardship First

Our facilities use closed-loop immersion cooling that fills once and recirculates, drawing no public drinking water for cooling and using no more day-to-day water than a typical office building.

Cleaner, Self-Sufficient Power

Our sites generate much of their own electricity on-site with U.S.-made Suniva solar, batteries, and Solid Oxide Fuel Cells, designed to be a net provider to the local grid rather than competing with homes and businesses for power.

Investing in Schools & Infrastructure

Through local agreements, each project delivers reliable, long-term revenue to local schools, roads, emergency services, and water systems, acting as a net contributor to local tax revenues without raising anyone's taxes.

A Good Neighbor, by Design

From low-noise equipment and dark-sky-friendly lighting to landscaped buffers, dust control, and a guaranteed decommissioning plan, we design every site to respect the land, the view, and the people around it.

Our projects WILL
  • Generate its own power on-site as a net contributor to the grid, and protect residential electricity rates
  • Use closed-loop immersion cooling with no public drinking water for cooling
  • Deliver long-term revenue to local schools and infrastructure
  • Hire locally and train the regional workforce
  • Restore the land at end of life under a funded decommissioning plan
Our projects will NOT
  • Raise residential or small-business electricity bills
  • Draw down municipal drinking-water supplies for cooling
  • Leave cleanup costs to the community or the landowner
  • Add bright, all-night light pollution to the night sky
  • Rely on local public funds or raise existing residents' taxes
No. Each project is designed to have zero impact on residential and small-business electricity rates. We generate our own power on-site with Solid Oxide Fuel Cells and U.S.-made solar, and each project is designed to generate excess power, making it a net contributor to the local grid rather than a drain on it. The new infrastructure and tax base we bring typically strengthens grid investment for everyone.

Have a question we didn't answer? We'd like to hear it.

Contact Our Community Team