Meta has announced it will build a massive one-gigawatt data centre northeast of Edmonton, the company’s first such project in Canada.
In a news release issued Wednesday, the company behind social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram said it will invest more than $13 billion in the project, which will be built in Sturgeon County.
Meta is also promising to invest $60 million to improve local infrastructure.
The company said the project will use a closed-loop, liquid-cooled system with “dry cooling” to eliminate operational water use. The data centre will be powered by electricity drawn from the grid as well as power generated on-site by natural gas.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith joined Meta officials and Sturgeon County Mayor Alanna Hnatiw for a news conference about the project that was held in Calgary.
Smith touted Alberta’s cool climate, skilled workforce and local expertise in artificial intelligence (AI) as the reasons for interest from the industry.
Meta to build $13B data centre near Edmonton
“We believe our province can compete with any jurisdiction on Earth and what we have to offer,” she said.
“Alberta is well on the way to becoming a central player at the heart of the AI revolution.”
Data centres are controversial because of the demand they can place on water resources, particularly to cool equipment.
Gary Demasi, vice-president of data centre strategy and development for Meta, said the project won’t require water to cool the systems.
“To put that into perspective, our annual water use is actually less than a typical Alberta golf course,” he said at the news conference.
“Meta has a goal to be water-positive in 2030. That means we’ll restore more water than we actually consume in our local watersheds.”
The facility will be located in an area northeast of Edmonton known as the Alberta Industrial Heartland. The Meta data centre will be joined by Project Greenlight, a natural gas-powered electricity general facility.










