Alvin Lang
Mar 03, 2026 16:33
Oracle submitted permit applications for natural gas microgrids at its massive AI data center tied to the $500B Stargate initiative with OpenAI.
Oracle has formally requested air permit approval from New Mexico’s Environment Department for two natural gas-powered microgrids that will supply its Project Jupiter AI data center campus—a cornerstone of the $500 billion Stargate initiative backing OpenAI’s next-generation models.
The Doña Ana County East and West Microgrids would operate behind-the-meter, meaning the 700-900 megawatt facility won’t draw from local grid infrastructure or affect residential electricity rates. Oracle committed in January to cover all energy costs at Project Jupiter and its other new AI facilities.
This permit application marks a critical regulatory hurdle for one of the largest AI infrastructure projects in U.S. history. The 1,400-acre Santa Teresa campus will eventually house up to 800,000 GPUs across four hyperscale buildings, primarily serving OpenAI’s training needs for GPT-6 and subsequent models.
Emissions and Sustainability Commitments
Oracle acknowledged air quality concerns in the border region, stating the microgrids will use “advanced emission controls” with continuous monitoring to meet federal and state standards. The company expects actual emissions to fall “well below” permitted levels.
To align with New Mexico’s 2045 net-zero targets, Oracle pledged to integrate solar and fuel cell capacity into the microgrid over time. The company also mentioned working with regional partners on “specific, tangible projects” for emissions reductions across Las Cruces, El Paso, and surrounding areas—though no concrete details were provided.
Economic Stakes for Doña Ana County
The numbers Oracle is dangling remain substantial: $384 million in annual economic impact during construction, dropping to $113 million once operational. The project promises 4,000 construction jobs—many union positions—and 1,500 permanent roles.
Direct community payments include $360 million to Doña Ana County for schools and infrastructure, plus $50 million specifically for water system upgrades. That water investment addresses one of the project’s most contentious local issues, given desert water scarcity concerns that have fueled ongoing lawsuits.
Oracle stock closed at $149.25 on March 2, up 2.65% as the company continues executing on its $165 billion, 30-year commitment to the site—with $50 billion allocated for the first five years alone.
Construction began in September 2025 following county approval, though procedural challenges from local opposition groups remain unresolved. The permit decision from NMED will determine whether Oracle can proceed with its independent power infrastructure or face delays that could ripple through the broader Stargate timeline.
Image source: Shutterstock