Energy Monsters: AI data centers prompt concern about a ‘Digital Cancer Alley.’ Also, the first U.S. climate refugees have regrets

Gus Bennett on Big Tech data centers that threaten more environmental and economic harm in Cancer Alley. Terry Jones on climate refugees 10 years after relocation.
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This week on Behind The Lens, with the explosion in the use of AI, a new report warns that Big Tech’s rapid buildout of data centers across the South could usher in a brand new wave of environmental and economic harms for Black and working-class communities, drawing parallels to the area’s infamous Cancer Alley. Critics warn that the buildout of high-tech data centers by companies like Meta, Amazon, and Google, will leave residents with higher utility bills, water scarcity, and increased pollution.

And in 2016, Louisiana received nearly 50 million dollars in federal grant money to relocate 37 residents or families of a once-thriving fishing community in Terrebonne Parish, as climate-charged hurricanes and sea-level rise made the area increasingly uninhabitable. Now nearly 10 years on, the former island residents say their new inland homes are substandard, with rainwater seeping through doorways, and flooded yards causing costly repairs.

This weeks guests are Lens photojournalist Gus Bennett and Floodlight News reporter Terry Jones.

Theme music by Podington Bear. Additional music Unexpectedly Untroubled by Podington Bear soundofpicture.com. 

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Carolyne Heldman

Carolyne Heldman has been in media for 35 years, most recently as Executive Director at an NPR member station in Colorado where she was responsible for new multi-platform content initiatives, strategic planning, research, branding, and non-traditional revenue generation. During her tenure she also created and launched four weekly news, public affairs and cultural affairs programs and monthly live Town Hall broadcasts. Heldman moved to New Orleans last summer with her husband and canine companion and they live happily in The Marigny.