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Musk's Solar Gamble Falls Short as Gas Turbines Keep Colossus Running

Musk's Energy Dilemma: Solar Dreams Meet Gas Reality

xAI has submitted plans to Tennessee authorities for a sprawling solar farm adjacent to its Colossus supercomputing center - but there's a catch. The proposed 88-megawatt photovoltaic array with 100 megawatts of battery storage would generate just enough electricity to power a small town. For Colossus? It barely scratches the surface.

The Numbers Behind the Solar Push

The $439 million project, partially funded by federal grants, aims to begin construction in early 2026. Seven States Power Corporation estimates the solar farm could start feeding the grid by mid-2027. On paper, it represents progress toward cleaner energy - until you realize those gleaming panels will only satisfy about 10% of Colossus's insatiable appetite for electricity.

"This is like bringing a water pistol to fight a forest fire," remarked one environmental advocate who requested anonymity due to ongoing litigation.

Gas Turbines Spark Outrage

The math explains why xAI continues operating hundreds of megawatts worth of natural gas turbines near the facility. These combustion engines pump out more than 2,000 tons of nitrogen oxides annually - pollutants linked to respiratory illnesses that disproportionately affect nearby communities.

University of Tennessee researchers documented alarming trends since Colossus came online:

  • 79% increase in peak NO₂ concentrations in Boxtown neighborhoods
  • Spike in asthma cases and respiratory emergencies
  • Predominantly Black communities bearing the brunt of pollution impacts

The Southern Environmental Law Center and NAACP have filed lawsuits challenging what they call "environmental racism" in permitting decisions.

Regulatory Shell Game?

Critics point to suspicious patterns in xAI's operations:

  • 15 turbines operating under "temporary" permits until 2027
  • 59 additional units planned for Mississippi's Colossus2 facility
  • 18 turbines mysteriously classified as temporary to avoid pollution tracking requirements

"Solar provides great PR," said Janice Carter of Memphis Clean Air Coalition, "but these gas plants tell the real story. They're playing whack-a-mole with regulators while communities suffer."

Musk counters that renewable energy adoption takes time. In a recent tweetstorm, he framed solar-plus-storage as transitional technology while reaffirming commitment to "100% clean power by 2028" - though without detailing how this ambitious target might be achieved.

The stakes keep rising as AI's energy demands explode. With Colossus reportedly consuming more electricity daily than some small countries, environmental groups argue piecemeal solutions won't cut it. They're pushing Tennessee lawmakers to mandate renewable energy quotas rather than approving endless temporary fossil fuel permits.

The coming months will reveal whether xAI's solar project represents genuine progress or just green window dressing.

Key Points:

  • Solar shortfall: Planned farm covers just 10% of Colossus needs
  • Health impacts: Nearby communities see pollution-related illnesses surge
  • Permit puzzles: Temporary classifications raise regulatory concerns
  • Transition claims: Musk promises clean energy future but lacks roadmap

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