Monclova Township just put a 12‑month pause on data center development, even though no formal projects are on the table yet.
The trigger was a zoning change that opened up local farmland to potential data center use, raising resident concerns about land use, infrastructure, and quality of life.
This aligns with a growing pattern in northwest Ohio, where Maumee, Waterville, and Waterville Township have already enacted similar moratoriums, effectively cooling near-term regional capacity expansion for GPU-heavy builds.
The move signals that local governments want more clarity on power demand, water use, noise, and tax structures before greenlighting AI-era data centers.
For operators, it’s another reminder that site selection risk now includes sudden political brakes, even in seemingly friendly, low-cost regions.
The reference to other states considering three-year moratoriums shows this could spread and stretch timelines for hyperscalers and colo providers planning AI clusters.
Worth a read for anyone modeling future AI data center siting and regional friction points.
Source: Monclova Township approves 12-month moratorium on data centers | wtol.com