As Switzerland's density of data centres grows to meet the demands of AI and digital services, public opposition is escalating. This report details the concerns over massive electricity and water consumption, highlighted by recent activist protests, and examines why communities are increasingly unwilling to host these large-scale facilities.

"The growing movement against data centres and Big Tech cannot be stopped by attempts at intimidation."
"Just as tech oligarchs organise themselves internationally, the resistance must also be internationally networked."
Switzerland is no longer just the land of banks and chocolate; it is now a global data fortress. With a staggering 13 data centres for every million residents, the Alpine nation has surpassed the United States in infrastructure density. This surge is fueled by an insatiable demand for Artificial Intelligence, transforming quiet cantons into high-voltage hubs. While these facilities offer digital sovereignty and economic prestige, they bring a heavy industrial footprint that many Swiss citizens are no longer willing to ignore. The tension is palpable as the physical reality of the 'cloud' lands squarely in local backyards. Proximity to major European markets and a stable, low-carbon energy mix make Switzerland an irresistible magnet for tech giants, but this magnetism is sparking a domestic firestorm. As the density of these facilities grows, the invisibility that once defined the internet's backbone has vanished, replaced by massive concrete structures that dominate the landscape. The question looming over Bern is no longer if the data will come, but where it will stop.
By 2030, artificial intelligence could consume as much water as 1.3 billion peopleânearly the entire population of India. This alarming projection from the United Nations highlights the catastrophic environmental toll of the AI boom. In Switzerland, a country that prides itself on its glacial purity, the massive water requirements for cooling these server farms are becoming a flashpoint for conflict. These are not merely buildings; they are resource-hungry machines that require cooling systems capable of draining local aquifers. The energy consumption is equally staggering, with global data centre electricity use projected to require more power than Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nigeria combined. In 2025 alone, tech titans funneled $400 billion into these facilities, a sum that eclipses the total energy investment for the entire continent of Africa. This massive diversion of resources toward digital processing at the expense of ecological stability has turned local planning meetings into battlegrounds. The 'green' image of the tech industry is crumbling under the weight of these numbers, as communities realize that every prompt processed by an AI comes with a tangible cost in liters and kilowatts.
Resistance is mobilizing, and it refuses to be contained by national borders. Following a forceful police raid on a protest camp in Benken, Zurich, activists from the 'AufstÀnde der Allmende' group have executed a strategic retreat across the German border to Tengen. Their mission remains unchanged: to halt the construction of a massive AI data centre in Beringen, Schaffhausen. These protesters are decrying what they call 'fuel for the climate crisis,' targeting international tech corporations and their billionaire owners. The movement is evolving into an internationally networked front, mirroring the global reach of the companies they oppose. 'The resistance must also be internationally networked,' the group declared, signaling a new era of cross-border environmental activism. This is no longer a local zoning dispute; it is a ideological war against the 'tech oligarchs' who seek to colonize Swiss land for global processing power. By relocating just kilometers away in Germany, the activists have ensured that the pressure on Schaffhausen remains constant, proving that police intervention only serves to harden the resolve of those fighting the digital expansion.
Switzerland stands at a critical crossroads where its digital ambitions collide with its environmental heritage. Global investment in data centres is set to explode to over $700 billion in 2026, and Switzerland is positioned to capture a significant share of that capital. However, the price of this leadership is a growing domestic insurgency. From the United States to the Netherlands, moratoriums and restrictions are being slapped on new projects as governments grapple with the strain on power grids and water supplies. Switzerland's federalist system now faces a stress test: can it maintain its reputation as a stable tech haven while its own citizens demand an end to the resource drain? The 'hotspot' emerging in Schaffhausen is a bellwether for the rest of the country. As the demand for AI services soars, the Swiss government must decide if the promise of digital sovereignty is worth the risk of social unrest and ecological depletion. The future of the Swiss landscape depends on whether the nation chooses to be the world's server room or its mountain sanctuary. The era of invisible data is over; the era of environmental accountability has arrived.