May 3, 2026
Est. 2026 ยท Independent
Tracking every proposed hyperscale data center across Missouri's 114 counties and St. Louis City.
Risk Profile

Jasper County

Southwest Missouri (Joplin Metro) · Pop. 123,071 · Carthage

Jasper has high structural risk. Key infrastructure factors make this area attractive to data center developers.

Data Center Risk
71/100
High
Nine counties have active projects — switch counties:

Active projects

Wildwood Ranch/Joplin (600 acres rezoned to M-2 heavy industrial)

Geronimo DC (unincorporated, no zoning)

Why this score?

Four weighted factors drive the Jasper County risk score.

Power availability
20/30

Above-average transmission capacity. Mid-sized facilities viable; hyperscale would need targeted upgrades.

Water capacity
8/15

Moderate water availability. Cooling-tower viable with standard permitting; closed-loop reduces risk.

Land availability
8/15

Moderate availability of large parcels. Some sites fit; assembly may be required for hyperscale.

Current exposure
35/40

Active data center project(s) in this county. Developers have already identified this area.

Water infrastructure

Any hyperscale data center in Jasper County would need a Missouri DNR permit for water withdrawal and discharge. The primary water source is Spring River / Shoal Creek.

A single hyperscale data center using evaporative cooling can require 1–5 million gallons per day. Closed-loop and air-cooled designs reduce that draw at higher capital cost. Meta's Kansas City facility can use up to 9.5 million gallons daily — more than 95,000 average Missouri households.

Electric infrastructure

Grid capacity and transmission access are the single biggest driver of where hyperscale developers site projects. Jasper County is served by Liberty Utilities.

Under Missouri's SB 4, data centers above 75 MW must pay premium utility rates and fully fund grid upgrades. However, utilities like Ameren Missouri are building new gas-fired power plants specifically to serve data centers — infrastructure costs that can be passed on to residential ratepayers. Missouri's Data Center Sales Tax Exemption provides up to 15 years of tax relief on construction, equipment, and utilities.

Adjacent county activity

Hyperscale campuses cluster near existing transmission and water infrastructure. Activity in adjacent counties is the single best predictor of where a developer will look next.

Jasper itself has active data center projects. See the project details above.

State legislative context

Missouri's 2026 legislative session directly affects Jasper County, regardless of whether a project is currently proposed here.

HJR 173 & 174 proposes eliminating the state income tax and replacing it with expanded sales taxes on services — while data centers continue to receive a sales tax exemption. SB 4 requires data centers above 75 MW to pay premium utility rates, but developers negotiate Chapter 100 bonds that exempt them from property taxes entirely.

Many rural Missouri counties, including Webster County, have no planning and zoning laws — meaning a data center can be proposed with no public hearing, no zoning review, and no county oversight. If Jasper County lacks zoning protections, residents should advocate for their adoption before a developer arrives.

What you can do

Active data center development in Jasper County.

Send a personalized opposition letter to your Jasper County commissioners for $9. We draft it, send it, and CC you.

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