The vote was unanimous. No debate, no dissent, no one asking for more time. Last August, Port Washington's city council approved an $8 billion data center campus: four massive buildings, 1.3 gigawatts of power, up to 1.2 million gallons of Lake Michigan water daily. Mayor Ted Neitzke called it "the cleanest form of industrial investment we can get."
That unanimity keeps nagging at me. It suggests something about how this city of 12,750 people sees its own future. They looked at what they have—abundant fresh water, mild winters getting milder, stable infrastructure, position in a region increasingly understood as a climate refuge—and they made a choice about how to use it.
The choice: prove you're ready before anyone asks if you are.
Port Washington negotiated a specific structure. Vantage Data Centers fronts $175 million for infrastructure upgrades—water, sewer, power. The company only gets reimbursed from new property tax revenue the project generates. If the data center doesn't create enough tax revenue, they don't get paid back. The risk sits with the developer, not the city.
That structure matters here. Port Washington is still processing the loss of manufacturing jobs that used to anchor the local economy. The Foxconn disaster in nearby Racine County, where the state borrowed billions for a facility that never materialized as promised, is recent enough that everyone knows what bad development deals look like. Council president Dan Benning emphasized this is "the opposite" of that.
But there's something circular happening. Port Washington's advantage is its position on the Great Lakes. The data center wants to be here because of that positioning. And the data center will consume significant resources to prove that Port Washington is the kind of place that can handle large-scale infrastructure in a climate-changed world.
You're using the thing that makes you resilient to demonstrate your resilience. The demonstration consumes the thing.
If your value is having abundant water, and you prove that value by deploying the water, what exactly have you preserved? The capacity to deploy more? The reputation for being deployable?
You're spending money to prove you're wealthy. Technically true. The proof and the thing being proven devour each other.
Sustainable? Or just a very confident way of using up an advantage?
The mayor's language choice tells you something. Cleanest compared to what? Manufacturing left behind contaminated sites. Tourism crowds the lakefront in summer, strains infrastructure seasonally. A data center sits there humming, consuming resources steadily but invisibly, generating tax revenue without smokestacks or traffic or visible environmental degradation.
Clean might just mean: easy to say yes to. Easy to explain. Easy to frame as progress rather than extraction.
The opposition here is measured. Clean Wisconsin asked for transparency about water usage and chemicals but explicitly said they weren't trying to stop the project. Even the questions feel polite. Everyone seems to understand the underlying calculation. Manufacturing isn't coming back the way it was. Tourism is seasonal. The city needs something.
And if you're going to be positioned as a climate refuge—if that's going to be your economic identity in the 2030s and 2040s—you need to demonstrate capacity. You need to show you can handle growth, that your infrastructure works, that you're not just abundant in resources but capable of deploying them.
The data center does that. It proves Port Washington can accommodate large-scale development. It generates tax revenue for further infrastructure investment. It signals to other companies, and maybe eventually to climate migrants, that this is a place that's ready.
It also locks in a particular vision of what "ready" means. Ready for corporate infrastructure. Ready for energy-intensive industry. Ready to be the kind of refuge that attracts data centers before it attracts people.
The unanimous vote suggests most people here see this as a reasonable bet given their specific circumstances. A city that needs economic development, a region positioning itself for climate migration, a moment when companies are willing to front infrastructure costs.
But the sequencing. If you use your climate advantage to attract infrastructure now, what does that mean for your capacity to absorb other kinds of growth later? If you prove you're ready by accommodating corporate development, does that make it easier or harder to accommodate the other things a climate refuge might need? Housing, schools, healthcare systems, the infrastructure that supports actual people rather than servers.
"The city's most precious natural resource."
That's how the mayor described the water. He's right. Whether demonstrating you can deploy that resource at scale is the same thing as preserving your capacity to deploy it for whatever comes next—that's the bet.
Port Washington is betting it is. They're betting that proving resilience now creates capacity for resilience later. That the infrastructure upgrades funded by this project will serve future needs. That being the kind of place that can handle a data center makes you the kind of place that can handle anything.
It's a confident bet. The kind of bet you can make when your city council votes unanimously, when your mayor uses words like "cleanest," when your development agreement protects you from the downside risk.
Maybe confidence is exactly what you need when you're trying to position yourself for a future nobody can quite see yet. Maybe the communities that will thrive as climate refuges are the ones willing to make big bets early, to use their advantages while they still have leverage, to demonstrate capacity before capacity is tested.
Or maybe making the bet too early, too confidently, forecloses other possibilities you haven't imagined yet.
Port Washington made its choice. The bulldozers are already there. In five years, we'll know if the bet paid off. In ten years, we'll know what it cost.

