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Home » China fueling anti-data center sentiment across US, Trump admin and ‘Shark Tank’ star Kevin O’Leary claim
China fueling anti-data center sentiment across US, Trump admin and ‘Shark Tank’ star Kevin O’Leary claim
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China fueling anti-data center sentiment across US, Trump admin and ‘Shark Tank’ star Kevin O’Leary claim

News RoomBy News RoomMay 29, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

The Trump administration and “Shark Tank” star Kevin O’Leary claimed anti-data center sentiments across the US are being fueled by a Chinese propaganda campaign.

O’Leary — whose 40,000-acre data center plans outside Salt Lake City have been met with protests — claimed in a Monday video that “nefarious accounts out of the country” tied to China were spreading misinformation about his project as part of a coordinated attack on American AI infrastructure.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum agreed during a Tuesday appearance on Fox Business.

“Any place that’s trying to build data centers is getting bombarded with foreign-directed propaganda to try to block these from being built,” Burgum said. “This is just another attack on the US and our ability to be competitive.”

O’Leary backed his claims with “90 pages of evidence” which he said indicated “millions, hundreds of millions of dollars” worth of funds were being funneled from entities around the world to fuel targeted misinformation campaigns against his data center.

And he isn’t the only one to arrive at such conclusions — at least three reports from tech and Trump-aligned thinktanks and non-profits, including the Bitcoin Policy Institute, Power the Future and the American Energy Institute, drew similar conclusions about Chinese meddling in US data-center sentiments in studies of their own.

“The opposition to US data center construction is not a spontaneous grassroots movement,” a recent American Energy Institute report read. “It is a coordinated campaign financed in substantial part by foreign donors, operating through a network of national advocacy organizations and their local chapters.”

But at least two of the groups named in those reports told the Washington Post they had nothing to do with a foreign influence campaign against data centers — and that they were baffled by the allegations.

“These reports are false, misleading and an attempt by big crypto special interests to manipulate the public into accepting data centers,” said spokesperson for the Wyss Foundation, an environmental conservation and Democratic party non-profit.

The anti-war group Code Pink, also named in the reports, called the claims “false and defamatory” — while a spokesperson for Alliance for a Better Utah, who O’Leary mentioned in his claims, called the Chinese allegations “laughable.”

O’Leary’s data center has been met with the kind of backlash many have faced as they’ve begun to crop up across the country to meet the rising computing needs of AI systems.

Many locals have decried having the massive facilities — warehouses filled with computer servers, often covering hundreds or thousands of acres — dropped in their communities, while others have raised fears about water and power costs going up, along with real estate being devalued.

Some have also raised concerns about how such facilities could affect the health of surrounding communities.

About 70% of Americans oppose the developments, according to a 2026 Gallup survey, with many fearing negative societal effects and job losses from AI proliferation.

But O’Leary has insisted his project — called the Stratos Project, in Box Elder, Utah — is taking every precaution to roll out responsibly, telling NBC News Thursday that the project would be developed in stages over 10 years to ensure local safety concerns were met.

He also said only about 9,000 acres of the project’s 40,000-acre plot would be used after that time, and that upwards of 6,000 jobs would be brought to the area — which he also said was in nobody’s backyard, but in the middle of remote and arid pasturelands.

Some opponents still aren’t convinced, however, and think O’Leary and the Trump administration’s claims of a Chinese plot are a clear sign of big tech trying to pull out the stops to get what it wants.

“This is like gaslighting 101,” said activist and three-time Trump voter Kyle Schmidt, who organized opposition to an Arizona data center despite his president’s strong support for the tech industry.

“They are saying, ‘Trust me. It is not what you think. It is what I am telling you,’” he added. “I would love to sit down with Mr. Wonderful and ask him, do you want one of these in your backyard?”

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