Artificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act
Summary
HR9442, the Artificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act, introduced by Rep. Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and referred to two committees on June 24, 2026, would prohibit new federal permits for AI-dedicated data centers, directly threatening the expansion plans of major cloud AI providers. The bill is in early legislative stages with low near-term passage probability, but introduces negative regulatory sentiment for hyperscaler AI infrastructure capex.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9442 introduces regulatory risk for hyperscaler AI data center expansion but has very low near-term passage probability as an early-stage bill sponsored by a minority-party member.
- 2.Major cloud AI providers (MSFT, GOOGL) face potential delays in AI data center capacity expansion if permitting moratorium gains traction, but current legislative path is long and uncertain.
- 3.Convergence with quantum-executive order shows diverging federal approach: HQ accelerating quantum while potentially constraining AI data centers, a theme to monitor.
Market Implications
The immediate market impact is minimal — the bill is early-stage and unlikely to pass in its current form. However, the introduction by a party-aligned member with 9 cosponsors signals that AI data center regulation is becoming a legislative talking point. For retail investors, this is a low-probability but high-potential-impact risk factor for hyperscaler cloud capex. MSFT and GOOGL trade at high multiples partly on AI growth expectations — any regulatory speed bump to data center expansion is a structural risk to those growth narratives. The EQIX/DLR data center REITs face minimal direct near-term impact but could be affected if AI colocation demand slows on regulatory uncertainty.
⚡ Government Convergence
This signal is one of the converging government actions below.
Over the last 90 days, 9 separate government actions have converged on AI Compute / Datacenter Power. What that means: federal dollars are already moving — agencies are soliciting bids and awarding contracts, not just talking, and legislation and executive action are building the policy and funding tailwind behind it. When independent channels move together like this — 7 bills, 1 procurement notices and 1 insider buys — it's the clearest early tell that Washington is committing to ai compute / datacenter power, the kind of build-up that reshapes the sector well before it's obvious in the headlines.
Converging government actions
- Procurement noticeDepartment of War Nationwide Coal-based Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) · 2026-06-18
- BillTo amend the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 to establish a center on artificial intelligence to ensure continued Un · 2026-06-18
- BillTo direct the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop best practices for measuring data center energy use, · 2026-06-18
- BillTo require the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to carry out a study on the environmental impacts of artificial intellig · 2026-06-08
- Insider buyInsider buy: FTAI Infrastructure Inc. ($45,800) · 2026-05-28
- BillArtificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act · 2026-06-24
- BillTo protect the authority of local governments to make zoning decisions regarding data center development, and to require community benefit a · 2026-06-11
- BillA bill to require the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to carry out a study on the environmental impacts of artificial i · 2026-06-09
Full Analysis
What Happened: On June 24, 2026, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) introduced HR9442, the Artificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act. The bill was referred to both the Energy and Commerce Committee and the Foreign Affairs Committee — a dual referral that signals the bill touches both domestic energy/industrial policy and cross-border implications. It has 9 cosponsors. The bill's core mechanism is a prohibition on new federal permits for AI data center construction or operation for a specified period, effectively a moratorium on new federally-permitted AI data center capacity.
Money Trail: The bill authorizes $0 in funding. It is a regulatory prohibition bill, not a spending bill. It imposes a constraint on private capital deployment, specifically on data center investments requiring federal permits (e.g., projects on federal land, or requiring federal environmental reviews, wetland permits, or grid interconnection approvals under FERC jurisdiction).
Convergence Context: The same week, the President issued an executive order accelerating quantum computing commercialization. Both actions touch advanced computing infrastructure, but from opposite directions — the EO accelerates quantum federal investment, while the bill would constrain AI data center buildout. This creates a regulatory divergence: quantum infrastructure gets boosted, while AI data centers face new permitting headwinds, potentially shifting some federal focus and private investment toward quantum alternatives.
Structural Winners and Losers: The primary losers are hyperscale cloud providers with aggressive AI data center expansion plans: Microsoft (MSFT) and Google (GOOGL). Both require extensive new data center capacity to support AI workloads. Amazon (AMZN) is also a major AI data center developer through AWS, but is less directly affected because a significant portion of their data center capacity is built on private land without federal permits. Data center REITs like Equinix (EQIX) and Digital Realty (DLR) are power consumers, not developers — they lease space and are indirectly affected if demand for AI colocation slows. Pure-play AI infrastructure companies like NVIDIA (NVDA) are also indirectly affected if hyperscaler capex slows.
Timeline: The bill is in earliest stages — referred to committee. Likely path: committee hearings and markup in Energy and Commerce, then potentially House floor. With a Democratic sponsor in a Republican-controlled House (119th Congress, 2025-2027), passage probability is very low. However, the introduction signals growing regulatory scrutiny on AI data center energy consumption and land use which could influence future legislation or executive action.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
To amend the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 to establish a center on artificial intelligence to ensure continued United States leadership in research, development, and evaluation of artificial intelligence systems, and for other purposes.
To require the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to carry out a study on the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence data centers and associated energy infrastructure, to require the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to convene a consortium on such environmental impacts, and to require the Administrator to develop a reporting system for the reporting of the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence, and for other purposes.
To direct the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop best practices for measuring data center energy use, study data availability for the purpose of improving energy demand forecasting capabilities, and for other purposes.
To protect the authority of local governments to make zoning decisions regarding data center development, and to require community benefit agreements as a condition for Federal tax incentives.
A bill to require the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to carry out a study on the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence data centers and associated energy infrastructure, to require the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to convene a consortium on such environmental impacts, and to require the Administrator to develop a reporting system for the reporting of the environmental impacts of artificial intelligence, and for other purposes.
A bill to require the Secretary of Defense to carry out an operational pilot program under the Hybrid Space Architecture initiative to evaluate the use of commercially available orbital data center services and space-based cloud computing capabilities relevant to national security space and joint mission requirements, and for other purposes.
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
Advancing Regenerative Agriculture and Strengthening American Farm Resilience
This executive order directs the EPA, USDA, and HHS to prioritize registration of alternative pesticides, expedite cumulative exposure research, and maximize funding for a regenerative agriculture pilot program, while creating public-private partnerships to expand adoption of conservation farming practices. The order specifically instructs the EPA Administrator to speed up registration actions for substances that can replace older active ingredients, and requires HHS to issue a grand prize challenge for cumulative chemical exposure evaluation technologies.
Establishing an America First Arms Transfer Strategy
This executive order directs the Secretary of War, along with the Secretaries of State and Commerce, to create an 'America First Arms Transfer Strategy' that prioritizes foreign arms sales to boost U.S. defense industrial base capacity, streamline export processes, and enhance production of key weapons systems. It mandates a sales catalog of prioritized platforms within 120 days, forms a task force to improve coordination, and reforms congressional notification procedures for arms transfers.
Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation
This executive order updates the National Quantum Strategy and establishes a national effort (QC-ADDS) to develop a quantum computer for scientific discovery, with deployment at a Department of Energy facility. It directs multiple agencies to prioritize quantum sensing, networking, and supply chain initiatives, and mandates plans for commercial readiness and national security applications.
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