A small, primarily Black community in Memphis is pushing back against tech mogul Elon Musk, claiming a massive facility he built there is overloading an already beleaguered town with dangerous pollutants. While community leaders and residents insist that the data centre is threatening the community’s energy supply and air quality, Musk’s company, xAI, shows no signs of slowing down.
Desperate to keep up with the artificial intelligence race, Musk created xAI to compete with ChatGPT, OpenAI’s popular chatbot. To power Grok, xAI’s chatbot, Musk searched for a city in need of investment where he could establish a massive data centre.
He settled on Boxtown in Memphis, a 90% Black working-class neighbourhood first settled by formerly enslaved people in 1863, to construct his supercomputer facility, Colossus, last year.
Colossus, like other AI data centres, requires a massive amount of energy. When it is fully completed it will consume 1.1 gigawatts of power – about “40% of the energy consumption of Memphis on an average summer’s day”, said The Times. The facility’s turbines will also “increase Memphis’s smog by 30-60%”, said The Tennessee Lookout.
Public outcry from the community has surged over the past year. In July, protesters who were gathered by the student coalition Tigers Against Pollution marched in front of the Shelby County Health Department holding signs that read “Elon XiPloits” and “our lungs / our lives / NOT FOR SALE”. When The Times asked xAI for comment on Memphis residents’ concerns about Colossus’s effects on air quality, Musk’s company gave a terse response: “Legacy media lies.” |