Organ Mountain News
  • Home
  • About
  • State
  • Local
  • Education
  • Crime
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Community
  • Sports
  • Events
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
Sign in Subscribe

Project Jupiter

4 posts

A large industrial complex sits in the desert, with tanks, pipelines and power infrastructure spread across the site. Mountains rise in the distance under a hazy sky.
Project Jupiter

Data center Project Jupiter’s greenhouse gas emissions could rival NM’s largest cities

Developers behind Project Jupiter, a massive data-center campus planned near Doña Ana County, say the site could emit more than 14 million tons of greenhouse gases annually — a level that would rival the combined emissions of the state’s two biggest cities.

Casa de Peregrinos Food Program logo featuring food icons inside a red circular seal.
Community

Project Jupiter donates $50K to Casa de Peregrinos during Sunland Park pop-up pantry

Project Jupiter donated $50,000 to Casa de Peregrinos, supporting a Dec. 5 pop-up pantry in Sunland Park as food insecurity increases across Doña Ana County

OPINION: Investing in southern New Mexico’s future
Opinion

OPINION: Investing in southern New Mexico’s future

State Reps. Nathan Small, Sarah Silva and Joanne Ferrary argue Project Jupiter can deliver union jobs, clean water infrastructure and economic growth in Southern New Mexico, provided the project includes transparency and safeguards.

A “for sale” sign marks land in Santa Teresa, New Mexico, where BorderPlex plans to build a $165 billion data center.
Economic Development

Resistance to data centers rises on the border

High Country News reports on growing resistance to a proposed $165 billion data center campus on the U.S.-Mexico border, as Doña Ana County residents raise concerns about water use and community impacts.

Organ Mountain News

© Organ Mountain News, LLC 2025

Powered by Ghost
  • Sign up
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • About
  • Ethics
  • Transparency
  • DEIJ Policy
  • Republish our Work
  • AI Policy
  • Style Guide
  • Our Impact
  • Funding
Creative Commons License

You’re free to republish our stories — with credit. Our journalism is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Please edit only for style or length, include attribution and a link back to Organ Mountain News. AP and Getty images may not be reused. See our republishing guidelines for more.