Edmonton Journal

Google plans data centre near Montreal

- FRÉDÉRIC TOMESCO

Google plans to acquire land southwest of Montreal on which it will build its first Canadian data centre at an estimated cost of $735 million.

The property in Beauharnoi­s, owned by Hydro-québec, covers 62.4 hectares and is currently zoned as agricultur­al land, the provincial government said Monday in a statement. Compensati­on measures are planned to mitigate repercussi­ons on the territory and agricultur­al activities, the government said.

“Every day, demand for Google services is increasing, and our physical infrastruc­ture follows the same rhythm,” the American tech giant said Monday in a blog post. “Once acquired, this site in Beauharnoi­s will ensure we have options to expand our data centre infrastruc­ture into Canada when our business requires it.”

The new facility will help Google meet its goal of running its entire business on clean electricit­y by 2030.

Google called the investment “an important addition to our long-standing presence in Quebec.”

The company set up shop in Montreal in 2004 with its first downtown office and three employees. New offices on Viger St. will have the capacity to house up to 1,000 employees when constructi­on is finished.

Although Google declined to provide a timeline for the project, the company said that at its peak, constructi­on of the Beauharnoi­s facility will require 300 to 500 people. The future data centre should employ “dozens of people, at least 20 to 30 in skilled roles,” according to the company.

“The growth of a company the scale of Google in Quebec confirms our status as one of the world's most dynamic and greenest technology hubs,” Economy Minister Pierre Fitzgibbon said in a statement.

As compensati­on for the decision to de-zone the Beauharnoi­s property, the Quebec government said an equivalent area nearby will be included in the agricultur­al zone and entrusted to the Fiducie agricole Upa-fondaction, a Quebec trust that aims to preserve the province's agricultur­al heritage.

Monday's announceme­nt touched off a firestorm of criticism from environmen­tal and farming groups alike.

It comes about two-and-a-half years after CPTAQ, the provincial commission for the protection of agricultur­al land in Quebec, issued a preliminar­y opinion opposing a request by the city of Beauharnoi­s to de-zone the area.

“The adoption of a decree that allows a foreign multinatio­nal to get its hands on targeted land without going through the establishe­d process sets a deplorable and worrying precedent,” Jérémie Letellier, head of the Union des Producteur­s Agricoles du Québec for the Montérégie region, said in a statement.

“Preferring residentia­l, commercial or industrial developmen­t to the nourishing vocation of our agricultur­al lands and bypassing the mechanisms in place to protect them will not ensure Quebec's food autonomy.”

The move, “which opens the door to a politiciza­tion of de-zoning in Quebec, must never be repeated,” Letellier stressed.

Montérégie is home to some of Quebec's highest-quality agricultur­al lands and most favourable climatic conditions.

Arable lands only represent about two per cent of the Quebec territory — compared with ratios of 45 per cent in the U.S. and 58 per cent in France.

“We're disappoint­ed. It looks like good news, but it's really a way to put a green label on a project that isn't green at all,” Coleen Thorpe, executive director of the environmen­tal group Equiterre, told Postmedia News by telephone.

Promoters “didn't demonstrat­e that there were no other non-agricultur­al lands available for this use,” she said.

“One could think that there were in fact other possibilit­ies, but that the project would have been more expensive for the company.”

By overruling the CPTAQ'S objections, Quebec is “underminin­g the commission's authority,” added Thorpe.

“The more you build on agricultur­al land, the more the land is fractioned and the easier it becomes for other promoters to ask for further de-zoning.”

 ?? KRISZTIAN BOCSI/BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Google says a data centre on a 62-hectare property southwest of Montreal will be worth about $735 million and will employ “dozens” of people, with 20 to 30 in skilled roles.
KRISZTIAN BOCSI/BLOOMBERG FILES Google says a data centre on a 62-hectare property southwest of Montreal will be worth about $735 million and will employ “dozens” of people, with 20 to 30 in skilled roles.

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