Why this score?
Four weighted factors drive the Texas County risk score. Methodology is fully documented — each input is public data or a reasoned proxy.
Served by Ameren Missouri. Above-average transmission capacity via Ameren Missouri grid.
Water source: Big Piney River / Ozark aquifer. Moderate water availability. Closed-loop or air-cooled systems likely required for hyperscale.
Moderate availability of large parcels.
No active projects nearby. Lower immediate pressure, but conditions can change quickly with a single developer announcement.
Water infrastructure
Texas County relies on groundwater from the Ozark aquifer and surface water from Big Piney River / Ozark aquifer.
The Ozark aquifer is the primary drinking water source for most of south-central Missouri. It is a karst system — meaning water moves through fractured limestone, making it vulnerable to contamination and difficult to remediate once impacted. A hyperscale data center drilling deep wells could draw down the water table that residential wells depend on. Missouri has no statewide groundwater allocation system, and rural counties often lack the zoning authority to regulate industrial water use.
Electric infrastructure
Texas County is served by Ameren Missouri, the state's largest electric utility, covering eastern and central Missouri with approximately 1.2 million customers.
The Missouri Public Service Commission approved a new large-load rate structure for Ameren Missouri in December 2025, specifically designed for data centers and other large industrial customers. The rate structure ensures these customers pay their full share of infrastructure and generation costs while protecting existing residential ratepayers. Ameren Missouri provides power for the Google and AWS data center campuses under development in Montgomery County.
Under Missouri's SB 4, data centers above 75 MW must pay premium utility rates. However, environmental groups including the Sierra Club have raised concerns that increased data center demand could pressure Ameren to extend the life of its Labadie coal-burning power plant — one of the dirtiest in the country — and build additional natural gas generation on top of the 6.1 gigawatts already in its future plans. Sulfur dioxide emissions at Labadie increased 17% last year.
State legislative context
Missouri's 2026 legislative session directly affects Texas 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 Texas 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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