Key Highlights
- Alphabet’s Google is committing $15 billion to Missouri infrastructure development, featuring a major data center in New Florence within Montgomery County.
- Construction will generate thousands of temporary jobs, while ongoing operations will support hundreds of full-time positions.
- The tech giant has secured more than 1 gigawatt of fresh generation capacity across Missouri, with an additional 500 megawatts under development via utility partner Ameren.
- Following 2025 state legislation, Google assumes full responsibility for power expenses and infrastructure investments associated with the facility.
- A new $20 million Energy Impact Fund aims to lower energy expenses for households across multiple counties.
Google, owned by Alphabet (GOOGL), has committed $15 billion to Missouri in what represents one of the largest technology investments the state has ever seen.
The investment focuses on establishing a data center in New Florence, located in Montgomery County. GOOGL stock traded up 0.32% when the announcement was made public.
The development will create thousands of construction positions throughout the building phase. After completion, the facility will maintain hundreds of ongoing employment opportunities.
Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe praised the announcement, noting it strengthens the state’s emerging reputation as a technology and innovation destination. Missouri has steadily attracted substantial infrastructure projects in recent years.
Google President and Chief Investment Officer Ruth Porat emphasized the company’s intention to combine infrastructure expansion with workforce training initiatives and energy cost reduction programs.
Regarding power requirements, Google has already secured contracts exceeding 1 gigawatt of new generation capacity throughout Missouri. The company is collaborating with Ameren to develop another 500 megawatts.
Ameren Chairman and CEO Martin Lyons described the undertaking as the largest economic development project within the utility’s Missouri operations — a significant claim considering Ameren’s extensive presence throughout the region.
According to Missouri legislation enacted in 2025, Google must pay 100% of electricity costs and infrastructure expenditures directly connected to the data center. This provision protects local utility customers from absorbing those expenses.
$20 Million Energy Impact Fund
Complementing the infrastructure investment, Google is establishing a $20 million Energy Impact Fund focused on communities within Montgomery, Clay, and Platte counties.
A portion of these funds will support home weatherization and energy efficiency improvements through the North East Community Action Corporation. Additional funding will finance construction apprenticeship programs and skilled trades education throughout Missouri.
The data center incorporates water conservation principles into its design. Google indicates the Montgomery County installation will utilize sophisticated air-cooling technology, limiting water usage primarily to standard non-industrial applications such as kitchen facilities.
AI Demand Driving the Build
The investment magnitude reflects escalating power and computing requirements associated with artificial intelligence technologies. Major cloud providers — Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta — have been channeling billions into data center infrastructure across the country.
Utility companies throughout the Midwest and Southeast regions have reported elevated electricity demand projections driven specifically by this infrastructure expansion.
Google’s Missouri investment represents part of the broader competition to acquire computing capacity before demand exceeds available supply.
Ameren’s Lyons reiterated that the project constitutes the single largest economic development initiative in the utility’s Missouri operations history, highlighting the facility’s substantial scale once it becomes fully operational.


