Colleen Grant Dick
5.9K posts

Colleen Grant Dick
@ColleenGDick
MS Human Nutrition & Biochem, Education, Real Food, Ecology, Regeneration, Natural Health, Wife, Mom, LDS, MAHA @Rainbirdrising, @StateofgraceLiv








Utah imports 98% of its fruits and vegetables, and 75% of its dairy. Utah can't feed itself and relies on just in time food deliveries from big rigs. Utah's 72 minute food supply is a far cry from the 1 year food supply culture of the past. Paying farmers millions not to grow food to save water for California which tore down 100 dams and reservoirs is a bad policy. The Utah Food Bank says 445,000 Utahns face food insecurity. We need more local food production, not less. End the war on Utah's farm water. Utah's farmers consume 2.8% of Utah's water. deseret.com/utah/2026/05/1…













Guy! I am almost to 6 MILLION followers on X! 😲 Crazy support for a regular Latter-day Saint🙏

A massive new hyperscale data center project called Stratos is planned for Box Elder County, Utah. If built, it would demand up to 9 gigawatts of electricity, more than twice the total power consumption of the entire state. But the real shock comes from the waste heat. According to Utah State University physics professor Robert Davies, the facility would generate an additional 7 to 8 gigawatts of heat, creating a total thermal output of roughly 16 gigawatts concentrated in one location. That energy release, Davies calculated, is comparable to detonating 23 atomic bombs per day in Hansel Valley, a high desert basin near the shrinking Great Salt Lake that naturally traps heat like a bowl. The project’s energy footprint would also be roughly equal to that of 40,000 Walmart Supercenters. Local temperatures could rise by about 5°F (2.8°C) during the day and a staggering 28°F (15.6°C) at night. Ecologists warn that such dramatic warming would stress an already fragile ecosystem, worsen toxic dust from the drying lakebed, and disrupt plants, wildlife, and water resources. As the backbone of artificial intelligence, data centers are essential for every AI query, image, and training run. The Stratos project now raises a critical question: Can the massive infrastructure behind AI expand without permanently transforming, and overheating, the communities and landscapes where it’s built? ["‘So much worse than I even thought’: Utah’s ‘hyperscale’ data center could create massive heat island near Great Salt Lake." The Salt Lake Tribune]




