The Oklahoman

Facebook plans to expand New Mexico data center

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQU­E, — Facebook’s plans for New Mexico now call for a half-billion-dollar investment and a data center that will span an area equal to 17 football fields.

Gov. Susana Martinez’s office announced early Tuesday that the social media giant will be doubling its investment in the state with the planned expansion of its data center currently under constructi­on near Los Lunas, a rural area just outside of Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico’s largest metropolit­an area.

The governor praised the announceme­nt, saying Facebook is among the state’s key partners as it works to diversify its economy.

“New Mexico’s powerful incentives are bringing more opportunit­ies to our state — once again ahead of schedule with more jobs and investment than initially anticipate­d,” the governor said in a statement.

The news comes as New Mexico looks to turn the corner after a crippling budget crisis that stemmed from a downturn in the oil and natural gas sectors and an overall weak economy. The state also has struggled with high unemployme­nt numbers, only recently ending its stretch at the top of the nation’s jobless rankings.

Had it not been for the oil and gas downturn, Martinez has said New Mexico’s over-the-year job growth in 2016 would have been the strongest it’s been in a decade.

State officials and business owners have been scrambling in recent months to take advantage of the windfall expected to come from the data center during constructi­on and once it’s online in 2018. They’re pushing for more high-tech industries in hopes of guarding against the volatility of the energy industry.

Facebook broke ground on the first building in October. It’s expected to go live in late 2018.

The second building will likely keep constructi­on crews busy through 2020.

Tom Furlong, Facebook’s president of infrastruc­ture, thanked the Martinez administra­tion and the village of Los Lunas for their support and said the company continues to find a strong pool of talent to build the data center.

More than 280,000 hours of work on the project have already been logged, more than 3 million cubic yards of dirt have been moved and more than 30,000 cubic yards of concrete have been poured, according to the company.

In August 2015, the two-term Republican governor led an economic developmen­t team to California to meet with company executives to promote New Mexico. Facebook selected the state over Utah for the data center after a mini bidding war.

Los Lunas agreed to give up property taxes for 30 years in exchange for annual payments starting at $50,000 and topping out at under $500,000, while the state promised billions of dollars in industrial revenue bonds and other economic developmen­t funding.

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? Chuck Goolsbee, site director for Facebook’s Prineville, Ore., data centers, shows the computer servers that store users’ photos and other data. Facebook is making good on plans to expand its high-tech data center already under constructi­on in central...
[AP FILE PHOTO] Chuck Goolsbee, site director for Facebook’s Prineville, Ore., data centers, shows the computer servers that store users’ photos and other data. Facebook is making good on plans to expand its high-tech data center already under constructi­on in central...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States