Growing demand for internet services and the data centers that enable them, driven largely by expanding Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, presents a variety of challenges and opportunities for Tribal Nations. Depending on each Nation’s economic, social, and environmental contexts and priorities, expanding data centers may threaten Indigenous relatives and lifeways, present opportunities to financially support those lifeways, or a mix of both. Namely, data centers tend to be major sources of heat and noise pollution; require new development and environmental degradation; use significant amounts of fresh water; use extreme amounts of electricity, potentially destabilizing outdated grids and costing other utility customers, as well as increasing dangerous emissions; and produce very few, if any, jobs for local residents. However, Tribal Nations could also benefit financially by providing integral goods and services such as new energy production, energy transmission infrastructure, land leases, financing, construction, project management, or data centers themselves.
While each Nation must make their own determinations of the potential costs and benefits, we provide here some recent sources of information to assist Tribal leaders, staff, and citizens in understanding and addressing these changes:
- The Office of Indian Energy, within the US Department of Energy, provides technical assistance to Tribal Nations on a variety of energy topics, including data centers. See their recent webinar on opportunities for Tribal Nations, including presentations about two Tribal enterprises.
- While some Tribal Nations are profiting from the data center boom, others are resisting the development, such as those described by IC Magazine.
- Arizona State University hosts the annual “Wiring the Rez” conference, and the 2026 conference focused on opportunities and challenges presented by AI, especially on the first day. See slides and reading materials from the conferences, including 2026, on the event website.
- Researchers at the American Indian Policy Institute followed up on that conference by publishing “Avoiding the next digital divide: Defining digital sovereignty for Tribal Nations in the AI age”, with suggestions for centering sovereignty when using AI (note: does not address impacts of the data centers enabling the AI).
- The environmental costs of data centers are significant, but vary greatly by size, region, and technology used in the buildings. The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy describes the massive scale and complexity of these costs. There are also large impacts on communities living near data centers, the topic of a recent virtual panel.