Data centers are touted as engines of technological innovation and progress. However, for many communities, these facilities represent a silent, dangerous burden—constant noise, soaring energy costs, electrical fires, and now rare cancers tied to water contamination.
Jim Doherty and Morrow County’s Story

Jim Doherty, rancher and former Morrow County commissioner in Oregon, noticed a disturbing pattern among the community’s 45,000 residents. Miscarriages, organ loss, and unusual cancer diagnoses occurred too frequently.
With local health office support, Doherty tested 70 wells. Results alarmed: 68 exceeded federal nitrate limits in drinking water. In just 30 homes visited, 25 people suffered miscarriages; six lost a kidney. Extreme case: nonsmoker developed laryngeal cancer.
Investigation first pointed to industrial mega-farms producing millions of gallons of fertilizer-laden wastewater. But complexity emerged: Amazon’s data center, opened 2011, played key role. Its massive water demand for cooling electronics intensified aquifer contamination, creating a vicious cycle of toxic waste recirculating.
Finding reframed data centers: no longer mere tech infrastructure, but potential public health crisis triggers.
Amazon’s Data Center and Water Contamination Role

Amazon’s data center—over 930 square meters—required millions of gallons for server cooling. Process consumed water resources and returned systems highly nitrate-concentrated—sometimes 8x state safety limits.
Agricultural runoff + data center wastewater saturated the water table. Even deepest aquifer zones contaminated. Center absorbed toxic sludge extracting groundwater, worsening issue.
Amazon defended claiming minimal system-wide consumption, no nitrates added. Residents rejected—evidence clear: contamination matched data center expansion; health impacts devastating.
Corporate narrative vs. community experience tension sparked debate on Big Tech environmental responsibility.
Community Activism and Resistance

Oregon Rural Action (ORA) mobilized. Director Kristin Ostrom likened to Flint, Michigan—slow official response worsened disaster. Morrow’s affected lacked political/economic power, heightening vulnerability.
Resident Kathy Mendoza publicly denounced nitrate health effects: unbearable joint/muscle pain from exposure. Her testimony captured community desperation—well-being sacrificed for tech progress.
Local activism seeks visibility/solutions. Fight: not just clean water, but environmental justice and right to live without fearing data center/corporate-driven diseases.
Morrow County case exposes digital boom’s hidden side. Data centers—modernity symbols—can breed contamination/disease. Story proves tech progress must balance public health/environmental protection—or human cost proves too high.
Reference:
- Rolling Stone/‘The Precedent Is Flint’: How Oregon’s Data Center Boom Is Supercharging a Water Crisis. Link
- Futurism/Amazon Data Center Linked to Cluster of Rare Cancers: Link
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