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Hamilton Advances Proposed Data Centre Moratorium in Pushback to Rapid AI Buildout
The motion would give Hamilton time to study grid, water and noise impacts as more than 200 written submissions backed a pause.
On Tuesday, Hamilton's planning committee unanimously supported a motion by Ward 3 councillor Nrinder Nann to pause data-centre development pending new local regulations addressing environmental and societal impacts.
Public opposition intensified in recent weeks as residents cited concerns over noise, environmental damage, and lack of municipal input into the federal artificial intelligence strategy. Protesters submitted 1,688 written comments and hundreds attended committee meetings.
Nann proposed a 12-month moratorium at most to allow due diligence, while 39 people registered to speak and 391 submitted written comments. Trent University researcher Anne Pasek called the framework "groundbreaking."
The committee directed staff to prepare an interim bylaw restricting development, which will move to the full city council for final approval. This follows Slate Asset Management's harbourfront proposal rejection earlier this month.
While Hamilton's move is unique in Canada, similar pauses have occurred in U.S. cities like Seattle. Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew recently rejected a massive data-centre project this month due to environmental impact and energy consumption.