Meta announced at a press conference in Calgary on July 8 that it will build a 1-gigawatt (1 GW), 2.9 million square foot AI data center in Sturgeon County, Alberta, Canada; the investment is estimated to exceed 13 billion CAD (about 9.2 billion USD), making it the company's first data center in Canada and its largest outside the United States.
According to Meta's official statement, the core specifications of the Alberta data center are as follows: capacity of 1 gigawatt (1 GW); building area of 2.9 million square feet; located in Alberta's industrial hub; it is Meta's largest data center outside the US and its first in Canada; Meta's global data center network includes sites in Sweden, Ireland, Denmark, and Singapore, with this being the 33rd.
Meta states that the campus is optimized for AI workloads supporting products used by billions of users; the company plans to invest up to 135 billion USD in AI infrastructure by 2026, double the 72 billion USD projected for 2025.
Reports indicate that Greenlight Electricity Center is an independent facility jointly owned by Pembina Pipeline, Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners, and Kineticor, with an investment of 4.6 billion USD; Meta does not own the power plant, only purchases electricity from it. Full operation of the data center requires up to 970 megawatts from the grid and on-site natural gas generation of up to 1,800 megawatts, enough to power 800,000 households.
The Pembina Institute, a clean energy think tank, warns that increased natural gas demand will lead to higher electricity costs for Alberta households in the coming years; Meta has announced it will use 100% renewable energy certificates to offset power consumption and promote clean energy projects in Alberta.
Alberta's Minister of Technology, Nate Glubish, noted that Meta's annual transmission costs of about 100 million USD could reduce other residents' transmission fees by up to 6%.
Based on data from Meta and the Alberta government, the main economic and environmental impacts are as follows:
According to Meta's official statement, the investment exceeds 13 billion CAD (about 9.2 billion USD), covering only the building itself. Enverus analyst Carson Kyle estimates that including AI chips and network equipment costs, the total expenditure could surpass 75 billion USD; this is a personal estimate, based on Meta's disclosed capital expenditure.
Reports indicate that Greenlight Electricity Center is jointly owned by Pembina Pipeline, Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners, and Kineticor; Meta does not own the plant, only purchases its electricity. The plant is expected to be operational in the second half of 2030, with an investment of 4.6 billion USD.
Meta's official statement commits to using 100% renewable energy certificates to offset electricity consumption and to selecting clean energy projects in Alberta to offset part of the energy needs. Regarding water, the data center employs a closed-loop liquid cooling system and dry cooling, with annual water use below that of a typical golf course in Alberta, and aims to achieve water-positive effects by 2030. The Pembina Institute's warnings about rising household electricity costs and the Alberta government’s responses are subject to official policy updates.
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