lā dīng měi zhōu拉丁美洲shù jù数据zhōng xīn中心kuò zhāng扩张de的rén lèi人类dài jià代价
Artificial intelligence is developing quickly, and it is also leading to more and more data centers in Latin America.
Data centers are like very large computer warehouses. They need electricity all the time, and they also use a lot of water and land.
Companies often say this will bring jobs, investment, and progress, so Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and Argentina are all promoting these kinds of projects.
But nearby residents often have to pay the price.
A large project in Brazil could use as much electricity as a city of 6 million people. Local people worry about flooding, environmental approvals being too fast, and residents not being heard.
Some residents in Chile and Uruguay also oppose Google’s data centers because these projects use a lot of water, and those places already have drought problems.
Researchers also say data centers may make electricity more expensive, create noise and heat islands, and affect people’s health.
Although companies say they will bring the future, many data centers need only a small number of workers after they are built.
More and more communities are starting to ask: Is this kind of development really good for everyone?