Nevada has become one of the fastest-growing data center markets in the country. The Nevada Data Center Alliance is the united voice of the companies building it, committed to reliable power, responsible water use, and growth that works for every Nevadan.
Nevada didn't stumble into this. Open land, direct access to power and transmission, and a government built for builders have drawn an unprecedented wave of digital infrastructure to the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center and the Apex corridor — the foundation of the AI economy, poured in Nevada concrete.
With that scale comes scrutiny. Questions about power, water, and what communities get in return are fair, and they deserve real answers rather than slogans. The Alliance exists to make sure Nevada's data center story is told accurately, debated honestly, and built responsibly — by the people doing the building, in the state they call home.
Figures drawn from the Data Center Coalition's 2023 Nevada economic analysis and current Northern Nevada investment reporting. Verify and source-lock all numbers before public launch.
An alliance is only as credible as the standards it holds itself to. These are ours, and we expect members to meet them.
Nevada's growth depends on a grid that keeps pace. We back transmission like Greenlink, generation built to last, and a simple principle: data centers fund the infrastructure they require, so ratepayers don't.
Modern facilities increasingly run closed-loop and air-cooled. In a state where every drop is already allocated, we hold members to genuine water stewardship and to telling the truth about what they actually use.
High-wage jobs, contracts for Nevada businesses, and tax revenue that funds schools, roads, and first responders — in rural counties and metros alike, not just the company town.
A constructive partner to the Legislature, the Governor's office, counties, and tribal nations. We bring data and good faith to the table — and we show up before the crisis, not after.
The Alliance is led by Tray Abney, one of the most experienced government affairs hands in the state. He served as chief lobbyist to a Nevada governor, spent more than a decade as director of government relations for the Reno + Sparks Chamber of Commerce, and founded Abney Government Relations.
He has led lobbying efforts through 10 legislative sessions over 20 years, building durable relationships with elected officials on both sides of the aisle, across city, county, state, and federal government.
Operators, developers, utilities, and the businesses that serve them — speaking with one voice.
Site work began in May 2024 on Tract's 686-acre Peru Shelf park, the first phase of a Storey County buildout that has since grown past 11,000 acres.
Tract's CEO has projected roughly $100 billion in total development value over a decade, backed by more than two gigawatts of contracted power.
The Alliance's director backed holding the line on taxes and keeping the state, in his words, "welcoming to entrepreneurs and easy to set up shop."
Whether you operate a campus, develop the land, supply the power, or serve the industry — your voice belongs at this table.
Email director@nevadadatacenters.com
Carson City · Reno · Las Vegas