2026-06-11T10:07:28.108Z / 路透社
一张2025年10月20日拍摄的美国弗吉尼亚州阿什本名为“美国东部1号”的亚马逊网络服务数据中心航拍图。REUTERS/乔纳森·恩斯特/档案照片 购买授权 打开新标签页
- 摘要
- 路透社/益普索民调发现:多数美国人反对在本地建设数据中心
- 14%的受访者对在附近新建数据中心表示可以接受
- 77%的人担忧人工智能驱动的数据中心会推高电费,这一担忧跨越党派界限
华盛顿6月11日路透电 – 最新路透社/益普索民调显示,仅有三分之一的美国人认可支撑人工智能的数据中心建设速度,且多数人会反对在自家社区附近兴建数据中心。
此次民调结果反映出美国公众对数据中心热潮的普遍不安,这一议题在11月3日中期选举前已成为选民和竞选活动关注的焦点。
订阅路透社美国政治新闻通讯,每周获取美国政治新闻及国际影响分析,点击此处注册。
美国总统唐纳德·特朗普政府将快速发展人工智能列为优先事项,将中国视为竞争性对手,并指示联邦机构加快该领域相关基础设施的审批进度。
这项为期六天的民调在全美范围内调查了4531人,于周一结束。调查显示,仅有33%的美国人认同“快速建设数据中心总体上是件好事”这一说法,约64%的人表示不认同。
共和党人对快速建设数据中心的支持率略高于民主党人。
路透社/益普索民调显示,约57%的受访者——包括三分之二的民主党人和一半的共和党人——表示会反对在社区内兴建数据中心。仅有14%的受访者表示可以接受在附近建设数据中心。
据跟踪数据中心行业的研究公司Cleanview数据,美国目前有710座数据中心在运营,另有1062个在建项目。
对电价的担忧
人工智能算法需要数据中心消耗大量电力,这类项目往往占用大片土地,消耗大量水资源,却不会提供大量长期就业岗位。
在中期选举前,一些民主党人——包括来自缅因州的进步派联邦参议院候选人格雷厄姆·普拉特纳——以数据中心可能推高电价为竞选议题,试图抓住共和党在通胀上涨问题上的软肋。目前美国全国汽油均价已连续两个多月超过每加仑4美元。
这一议题可能会引发共鸣。
路透社/益普索民调显示,约77%的受访者——包括比例相近的共和党人、民主党人和无党派人士——表示担忧人工智能会推高电价。
“这让我极为担忧,”65岁的共和党人马克·汤普金斯如是说,他是受访者之一,住在印第安纳波利斯外汉考克县的农村地区,在一家电信公司担任高级项目经理。“就目前而言,我的电费已经很高了。”
尽管今年4月一场座无虚席的听证会上该项目遭到强烈反对,印第安纳波利斯大都会发展委员会仍将审议开发商DC Blox提出的在该市东侧建设价值20亿美元数据中心的计划。
另一位共和党受访者、72岁的南本德退休居民洛伦·史密斯表示,他同样担忧数据中心及其基础设施的建设速度,以及开发商和地方官员对项目缺乏透明度。
“政客们对他们提供的税收优惠等条件讳莫如深,”史密斯说,并补充道数据中心是他在中期选举中最关注的三大议题之一。
对数据中心的担忧与人们对人工智能快速扩张可能扰乱劳动力市场的广泛担忧相关。民调发现,一半的美国人担心人工智能可能导致他们或家庭成员失业。
面对公众的反对,已有14个州考虑或正在考虑暂停新的数据中心项目。
瓦莱丽·沃尔科维奇和杰森·兰格华盛顿报道;大卫·加芬编辑
我们的准则:汤森路透信托原则 打开新标签页
瓦莱丽·沃尔科维奇在华盛顿特区负责报道美国气候与能源政策,关注联邦机构和国会的气候与环境监管,以及能源转型如何重塑美国。她的其他报道领域包括其获奖的塑料污染报道、全球气候外交及联合国气候谈判的来龙去脉。
杰森·兰格是华盛顿通讯员,专注于政治数据报道。可发送爆料邮件至jason.lange@thomsonreuters.com
Americans wary of AI-driven data center boom, Reuters/Ipsos poll shows
2026-06-11T10:07:28.108Z / Reuters
An aerial view of an Amazon Web Services Data Center known as US East 1 in Ashburn, Virginia, U.S., October 20, 2025. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
- Summary
- Majority of Americans oppose local data center construction, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
- 14% of respondents comfortable with a data center built nearby
- 77% worry AI-driven data centers will raise electricity costs, concerns span political parties
WASHINGTON, June 11 (Reuters) – Just one-in-three Americans approve of the fast pace of data-center construction that supports artificial intelligence and most would oppose building one in their own community, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
The poll results reflect widespread public unease over the data center boom in the United States, an issue high on the minds of voters and political campaigns ahead of the November 3 midterm elections.
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U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has prioritized rapid AI development, citing China as a competitive rival, and has directed federal agencies to accelerate permitting for infrastructure tied to the sector.
The six-day poll, which surveyed 4,531 people across the country and closed on Monday, showed just 33% of Americans agreed with a statement that it was mainly a good thing to build data centers at a rapid pace. Some 64% disagreed.
Support for rapid data center construction was a little higher among Republicans than among Democrats.
Some 57% of people surveyed – including two-thirds of Democrats and half of Republicans – also said they would oppose a data center being built in their community. Just 14% of survey takers said they were okay with a center being built near them, according to the Reuters/Ipsos poll.
There are 710 data centers now operating in the United States and another 1,062 planned projects, according to Cleanview, a research firm tracking data centers.
WORRIES ABOUT ELECTRICITY PRICES
AI algorithms require data centers to burn through copious amounts of electricity, and the projects often take up big swaths of land and consume large amounts of water without providing significant numbers of long-term jobs.
Ahead of the midterms, some Democrats – including progressive U.S. Senate candidate Graham Platner from Maine – are campaigning on the risk that data centers could drive up electricity prices, aiming to seize on Republican vulnerability over rising inflation, as the national average for gasoline has exceeded $4 a gallon for more than two months.
That message could resonate.
Some 77% of survey respondents – including similar shares of Republicans, Democrats and independents – said they were worried that AI would make electricity more expensive, according to the Reuters/Ipsos poll.
“That is extremely concerning for me,” said Mark Thompkins, one of the survey respondents, a 65-year old Republican who lives in a rural part of Hancock County outside of Indianapolis, and works as a senior project manager for a telecom company. “My electric bills are high as it is.”
The Indianapolis Metropolitan Development Commission will consider a proposed $2 billion data center development on the east side of the city by developer DC Blox, even after vocal opposition to the project during a packed hearing in April.
Retired South Bend resident Loren Smith, 72, another Republican survey respondent, said he is also concerned about the speed at which data centers and their infrastructure are being built, and the lack of transparency from developers and local officials about the projects.
“Politicians are being very secretive about what they are offering the as far as tax breaks,” said Smith, adding that data centers are among his top three issues in the mid-term elections.
Concerns over data centers relate to broader worries that the rapid expansion of AI could upend the labor market. Half of Americans fear that AI could put them or someone in their household out of work, the poll found.
Faced with public backlash, fourteen states have considered or are considering a moratorium on new data center projects.
Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Jason Lange in Washington; editing by David Gaffen
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab
Valerie Volcovici covers U.S. climate and energy policy from Washington, DC. She is focused on climate and environmental regulations at federal agencies and in Congress and how the energy transition is transforming the United States. Other areas of coverage include her award-winning reporting plastic pollution and ins and outs of global climate diplomacy and United Nations climate negotiations.
Jason Lange is a Washington correspondent focused on political data. Send tips to jason.lange@thomsonreuters.com
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