Department of Information Technology, School of Business and Information Technology, Purdue University Global, United States.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 28(03), 2124-2133
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2025.28.3.4306
Received on 22 November 2025; revised on 27 December 2025; accepted on 30 December 2025
In September 2025, Lyon Township, Michigan approved a massive data center through an industrial zoning exemption that required no public hearings, no community votes, and no disclosure of actual energy consumption. Residents learned about the approval three months later through Facebook posts. This case study examines how technology infrastructure concentration operates through regulatory loopholes in rural communities using regulatory loopholes to bypass notice.
The facility approved—Project Flex—will consume 8.3 trillion watt-hours of electricity annually, equivalent to the total consumption of entire Michigan counties with populations exceeding 190,000 residents. It will extract 912 billion gallons of water yearly---approximately 260 times Flint's entire municipal water system (3.5 billion gallons annually). It will generate 4.2 million metric tons of carbon dioxide annually, equivalent to 913,000 vehicles driving continuously.
All of this was approved without community knowledge, consent, or negotiation. This research documents how digital redlining operates through infrastructure concentration in rural communities, using Lyon Township's experience to reveal the systematic pattern of placing massive technological burdens in places without institutional capacity to resist.
Digital redlining; Infrastructure justice; Rural vulnerability; Zoning law; Energy concentration; Democratic deficit
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Mario DeSean Booker. Watts the Problem? Digital Redlining and the Hidden Energy Crisis Lyon Township Never Knew It Approved. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2025, 28(03), 2124-2133. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.28.3.4306.
Copyright © 2025 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0