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Gosh, it’s almost as if IEDC didn’t even think about or plan for power and water requirements
…
for power and water intensive businesses.
those are known as “mere details”. Less important than headlines and keeping Lilly happy. Start the building, figure out what you need as you go along, then get it. Power requirements have now doubled, and only two entities are building. This can only get worse for customers of the impacted power companies, which may be all of us as it appears MISO is re-routing power to satisfy LEAP demand.
It’s really more of a lack of due diligence and planning by the IEDC when they started. It was all a ‘developer’ mentality of ‘we can work that out….we can make that happen’. That may work on smaller sites and smaller developments, but not a project the size of LEAP. Professional Land Planning-Analysis, by a professional multi-disciplinary team, could-would have brought the issues up on the front end. Now it’s just see what we can make work.
This shouldn’t be an issue. With all the billions Lilly makes pumping chemicals into people’s arm, they should be able to construct dozens of power stations. Why doesn’t Lilly pay for this?
Wait until you learn about data centers… and energy/water use.