Why this score?
Four weighted factors drive the Barry County risk score. Methodology is fully documented — each input is public data or a reasoned proxy.
Served by Liberty Utilities. Regional utility with moderate grid capacity.
Water source: Table Rock Lake watershed. Good water access via regional water sources.
Limited large-parcel availability or terrain constraints.
No active projects nearby. Lower immediate pressure, but conditions can change quickly with a single developer announcement.
Water infrastructure
Barry County's water infrastructure is anchored by Table Rock Lake watershed.
Reservoir-fed water systems can support large industrial users, but data center cooling demand (1–5 million gallons/day for a hyperscale facility) would represent a significant fraction of available supply. Under Missouri DNR rules, large withdrawals require permitting. During drought conditions, reservoir levels directly affect availability — and climate projections suggest increasing variability in Ozark-region precipitation.
Electric infrastructure
Barry County is served by Liberty Utilities (formerly Empire District Electric), the primary electric provider for southwest Missouri including the Springfield and Joplin metros.
Liberty operates the La Russell Energy Center in eastern Jasper County, which provides the transmission infrastructure that makes the region attractive for hyperscale development. Geronimo Power (Minnesota) is planning a data center and solar/battery park near the La Russell facility. Liberty's service territory covers much of the Ozarks region, where terrain and distributed population create different grid constraints than the flat Kansas City metro served by Evergy.
Under Missouri's SB 4, data centers above 75 MW must pay premium utility rates and fund grid upgrades.
State legislative context
Missouri's 2026 legislative session directly affects Barry County, regardless of whether a project is currently proposed here.
HJR 173 & 174 proposes eliminating Missouri's income tax and replacing it with expanded sales taxes on services — while data centers continue to receive a sales tax exemption on construction materials, equipment, and utilities for up to 15 years. According to the Missouri Budget Project, 80% of Missourians would face a net tax increase.
At the local level, developers negotiate Chapter 100 industrial revenue bonds that exempt them from real and personal property taxes. Under SB 4, data centers above 75 MW must pay premium utility rates. Many rural Missouri counties have no planning and zoning laws, meaning a data center can be proposed with no public hearing, no zoning review, and no county oversight.
No active data center in Barry County — yet.
Festus voters ousted every council member who approved a $6B data center. Webster County residents started a petition in days. What they did, you can do — but only if you're ready before the proposal lands.
Enter your address and pick your concerns. We write a personalized opposition letter citing state statutes and project data, then email it directly to every commissioner in your county on your behalf. You get a full copy. 60 seconds.
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