The Heat Nobody Counts - PUE Ends at the Meter

Meta’s Prometheus data center in New Albany, Ohio is scaling to 1.2 GW. To get there, they’re building behind-the-meter natural gas turbines — two 200 MW Socrates generation facilities, supplied by dedicated gas pipelines, isolated from the grid. In Virginia, the same story plays out with diesel generators, enough of them that it became the top legislative concern entering the 2026 session. The industry talks about PUE as if it were a verdict on environmental efficiency. It isn’t. PUE measures one envelope — the data center facility. Total facility power divided by IT equipment power. A PUE of 1.3 means 30% overhead for cooling, lighting, and support systems. That’s the metric everyone optimizes, the number that shows up in sustainability reports, the figure that earns applause at conferences. ...

AI Infrastructure Placement Is a Business Decision

Traditional internet architecture solved latency with caching. Static content, images, JavaScript bundles—all pushed to edge nodes milliseconds from users. CDNs achieve 95-99% cache hit rates. The compute stays centralized; the content moves to the edge. AI breaks this model completely. Every inference requires real GPU cycles. You can’t cache a conversation. You can’t pre-compute a response to a question that hasn’t been asked. The token that completes a sentence depends on every token before it. ...