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An aerial view of a 33 megawatt data center with closed-loop cooling system on October 20, 2025 in Vernon, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
FILE - A construction crew works on a data center on July 17, 2024, in Ashburn, Virginia. (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images)
HAMBURG, GERMANY - JUNE 07: A "Mistral" supercomputer, installed in 2016, at the German Climate Computing Center (DKRZ, or Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum) on June 7, 2017 in Hamburg, Germany. The DKRZ provides HPC (high performance computing) and associated services for climate research institutes in Germany. Its high performance computer and storage systems have been specifically selected with respect to climate and Earth system modeling. With a total of 100,000 processor cores, Mistral has a peak performance of 3.6 PetaFLOPS. With a capacity of 54 PBytes, its parallel file system is currently one of the largest in the world. The DKRZ's robot-operated tape archive has currently a capacity of 200 petabytes and allows for long-term archiving of climate simulations such as those carried out with respect to reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. (Photo by Morris MacMatzen/Getty Images)

Added costs from data centers adds to affordability debate for midterms

An aerial view of a 33 megawatt data center with closed-loop cooling system on October 20, 2025 in Vernon, California. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)