Deep Atomic Data Center
Idaho Falls, Bonneville County, ID
Source: Primary source
Deep Atomic Data Center is a proposed data center in Bonneville County, ID. DataCentersExposed has documented 60 MW of reported power capacity at this site.
Reporting by Eric Keller · Updated Jun 18, 2026
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Bonneville, Idaho
Deep Atomic Data Center in Idaho Falls, ID is contested. Petition: https://www.change.org/p/say-no-to-nuclear-powered-ai-in-idaho-without-strong-climate-and-safety-protections Track what's being decided, when, and how to weigh in.
Your action kit
Sourced arguments and ready-to-send letters — every figure links to a primary record. Edit to add your own story.
60 MW of new demand — roughly a city of 48,000 homes.
Large new loads can raise transmission and capacity costs that land on every ratepayer. Residential power in ID is 12.7¢/kWh, up 6.8% year-over-year. (MW→homes is a rough ~800/MW planning figure.)
SourceDemand a full, public review — not a rubber stamp.
Ask for an independent noise study, a water-and-power impact assessment, enforceable conditions (setbacks, hours, cooling type), and that the record stays open for written comment. Procedural shortcuts have voided approvals elsewhere.
Edit freely before sending — it's a starting point. Add your own story; personal comments carry the most weight.
Edit freely before sending — it's a starting point. Add your own story; personal comments carry the most weight.
Join the campaign
Add your name and we'll email you before every hearing, with what to say and where to show up.
Neighbors taking a stand
Overview
source: linkImported from the FracTracker Alliance U.S. Data Centers Tracker after review. Details to be corroborated from primary sources.
Grid & water — why here
source: HIFLD · EPAThe closest existing grid infrastructure and the municipal water system this location sits in — the same constraints the buildout model screens on (it won't site a campus more than ~2 km from a substation or ~5 km from municipal water). Distances are straight-line to public HIFLD/EPA features, not a metered connection.
In the news
source: Google News- Oklo’s advanced reactors and data center partnershipsMSN· Jul 13, 2026
- Shoshone-Bannock Tribes reaffirm opposition to proposed AI data center in PocatelloIdaho State Journal· Jul 9, 2026
- After Utah data center controversy, Curtis calls for federal transparency standardsIdaho State Journal· Jul 8, 2026
- Logan City Council places moratorium on data centersPost Register· Jul 8, 2026
- Opinion: Data centers aren’t draining the Mountain WestPost Register· Jun 18, 2026
- Haviland’s Old West Adventures in Harriman Park wants you to horse aroundEast Idaho News· Jun 10, 2026
Tax breaks & subsidies
source: Good Jobs First / GASB 77No per-deal tax break is linked to this site yet. No state discloses the recipient of a data-center abatement at the facility level, so per-site deals are rare in the public record. If you have a development agreement or board resolution for this site, send it to us.
Water use
No public record of this facility's water use. We check state withdrawal reporting for self-supplied sites; municipally supplied sites only become visible through a public-records request to the local water utility — a per-facility request tool is coming. If you have a utility document for this site, send it to us.
EPA permits & violations
source: EPA ECHONo reported violations as of last sync.
Nearest school
source: HIFLD / NCESThe nearest public school, A H Bush Elementary School in Idaho Falls, is 0.7 mi from this site (322 students).
Schools are sensitive receptors for the noise, backup-generator exhaust, and traffic a large data center brings. Straight-line distance to the nearest public school (HIFLD/NCES, US public schools only).
Hearings timeline
No public-hearing records linked to this site yet. We surface planning-commission and board-of-supervisors dates when a record names a facility. If you know of a hearing on this site, tell us.