Data Centre Industry News & Market Intelligence

Amazon plans major data center expansion in tiny Oregon town

data center expansion amazon

Amazon plans major data center expansion in tiny Oregon town

Arlington and Gilliam County have just 2,000 residents spread over 1,200 square miles. Home to wheat farms and wind turbines, the community could soon be home to massive Amazon data centers.Jamie Francis/Oregonian file photo

Amazon is poised for massive expansion of its data center operations in eastern Oregon on 400 acres the company is buying in the tiny Columbia River city of Arlington.

The Seattle-based company already has several enormous data centers in neighboring Morrow and Umatilla counties. Amazon said it could be many years before it’s operating in Arlington as it pursues permits, electricity and tax breaks for the site, but the company and community are planning for the major changes that will accompany the project.

Data centers have grown rapidly into one of Oregon’s largest industries over the past several years. The huge installations are having a profound impact in small cities and counties across Oregon, even as they strain the state’s energy supply and electrical grid.

For Gilliam County, which has just about 2,000 residents spread over more than 1,200 square miles, Amazon’s arrival represents the city’s biggest economic opportunity in decades.

Arlington Mayor Jeffery Bufton, said :

It’s going to be an enhanced growth spurt for us and we’re actually quite excited about it,

“We won’t end up being just a truck stop on the highway.”

Arlington sits about 140 miles east of Portland, along Interstate 84 and the Columbia River. Much of the original city was flooded in the 1960s when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built the John Day Dam, raising the river level. The new town, on higher ground, is nestled against hills abutting the Columbia.

Gilliam County is wheat country and, more recently, it’s also home to some of the state’s largest wind and solar projects. Arlington is the destination for most of the garbage produced by people living in Portland and Seattle. The trash comes by truck or by train to a garbage dump south of town.

Amazon paid $10 million last summer for 376 acres on a mesa above the city and is in the process of buying another 30 acres from the Port of Arlington for $3 million. The city and port began readying the properties for development a dozen years ago, hoping it would eventually attract new industry to the region.

The site makes sense for Amazon’s expansion because of its proximity to the company’s other Oregon data centers, according to Kevin Miller, the company’s vice president of data centers in Seattle.

Many of Amazon’s corporate clients run complex software applications that draw from many databases and servers. Even light takes time to travel from place to place, so Miller said Amazon’s clients need their data to be stored in data centers that are close to one another geographically so that information can move among various computers almost instantaneously.

Miller said,

We all think light is very, very fast,

“But when you start to do the math, actually, the milliseconds start to add up the farther away the data centers are.”

Amazon plans 13 years ahead when deciding where it will build its next data centers, according to Miller. He said a land purchase like the recent one in Arlington is the first step in a process that takes “many years,” though Miller declined to speculate on just when it might start building there.

But he did say that Amazon expects its footprint in Arlington could be as large as its big operations in Morrow and Umatilla counties.

Miller said,

For the size of parcel that we’re getting in Arlington,

“I think it could be equivalent to what we would have in nearby locations.”

When choosing sites for its data centers, Miller said Amazon looks for access to power, land and the ability to secure permits to build.

Clean power is a priority, too, because Amazon has committed to buy all its energy from renewable sources and because its Arlington site will be subject to Oregon’s clean-energy mandates.

The Arlington site is served by PacifiCorp, the Portland-based utility owned by Warren Buffett’s investment fund. The energy cooperative that serves Amazon in Morrow and Umatilla counties is exempt from Oregon’s renewable energy requirements but investor-owned utilities like PacifiCorp are not.

Last year, Amazon agreed to buy more than 200,000 megawatt-hours of electricity annually from an Avangrid wind farm in Gilliam County. It will need a lot more than that to power the operations in Arlington and finding that power could be tricky, given the Northwest’s constrained transmission grid and soaring demand for electricity throughout the region.

Some data centers also use high volumes of water but the amount varies considerably based on the technology used to cool the servers.

READ the latest news shaping the data centre market at Data Centre Central

Amazon plans major data center expansion in tiny Oregon town, source

Follow us on LinkedIn!

Join our weekly newsletter!

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Follow us

Don't be shy, get in touch. We love meeting interesting people and making new friends.

Most popular

Most discussed