Quick Facts
Programme: DAF Request for Lease Proposal — AI data centre development
Locations: Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson · Eielson AFB · Clear Space Force Station
Available land: ~4,700 acres across three installations
Minimum investment: $500 million per project
Minimum power: 100 MW of new electrical load
Potential capacity: Up to 12 data centres
Industry Day: April 23, 2026 (virtual) + site tours
Cold War Bases, AI-Age Missions
Alaska’s military bases were built for the Cold War. Eielson hosted nuclear-armed bombers that sat on alert, ready to fly over the pole toward the Soviet Union. Clear tracks ballistic missiles with an early warning radar that scans the northern sky around the clock. Elmendorf-Richardson is home to F-22 Raptors that intercept Russian bombers probing the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone — a mission that happens dozens of times a year.
The Natural Cooling Advantage
Data centres generate enormous amounts of heat. The servers that train and run AI models consume electricity measured in megawatts, and a significant portion of a conventional data centre’s energy budget goes to cooling. In Alaska, the ambient air temperature averages well below zero for months at a time. Eielson’s average January temperature is minus 22 degrees Celsius. That cold is not a disadvantage — it is an asset worth billions in saved cooling costs. The tech industry has already begun chasing cold climates. Data centres in Scandinavia, Iceland, and northern Canada are booming precisely because the climate does the cooling for free. Alaska offers the same advantage, plus something Scandinavia does not: co-location on active military installations with existing security infrastructure, power grids, and fibre-optic connectivity.Security Concerns and Hurdles
The plan is not without controversy. Putting private-sector AI infrastructure on military bases raises questions about security clearances, physical access, and the risk of co-locating classified military operations with commercial tenants. The Air Force addressed this by structuring the leases to maintain military control over the installations while granting developers access to specific parcels. There are also infrastructure challenges. Alaska’s power grid is isolated from the continental United States. Generating 100-plus megawatts of new electrical load at each site will require significant investment in power generation — likely natural gas, given Alaska’s abundant supply, though renewable options are being explored. The Air Force is hosting a virtual industry day on April 23 to gauge interest, followed by in-person site tours. The response will reveal whether the tech industry sees Alaska’s Cold War bases as the next frontier for AI — or whether the remoteness, the logistics, and the Arctic darkness are a bridge too far. Sources: Air & Space Forces Magazine, Defense One, Data Center Dynamics, MilitarySpotRelated Posts



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