🚨 WE NEED YOUR COMMENT AGAINST PROJECT JUPITER BY MIDNIGHT TONIGHT! 🚨
- shannon5085
- 19 hours ago
- 2 min read

Read the Albuquerque Journal Article
TAKE ACTION: SUBMIT YOUR PUBLIC COMMENT
Tell the New Mexico Environment Department to deny Project Jupiter’s air permit and require a full accounting of the project’s impacts on our air, water, climate, and communities.
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We put together this handy-dandy guide to submitting your comment with the background, resources and talking points you need to make it easier for you to submit your comment before midnight tonight!Â
THE LATEST SHENANIGANSÂ
The more New Mexicans learn about Project Jupiter, the more alarming the picture becomes.
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The companies behind this $165 billion AI data center project are already out of compliance with their agreements with Doña Ana County. They have failed to submit required quarterly jobs reports and have not provided requested environmental assessments—even as construction continues and the companies seek approval for a massive new fossil gas-powered energy system.
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And now, New Mexicans say their names were used without their permission on letters urging state regulators to approve Project Jupiter’s air permit.
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Residents of three New Mexico cities told Source New Mexico that their names appeared on letters supporting Project Jupiter that they did not write, sign, or authorize. The letters were submitted to the New Mexico Environment Department as evidence of public support for the very air permit now under consideration.
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Albuquerque City Councilor Tammy Fiebelkorn released a public statement condemning the use of her name in support of the project in a comment submitted to NMED that she did not write nor consent to.
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This comes amid a much larger corporate campaign to manufacture support for the project. Oracle has paid canvassers to knock on New Mexicans’ doors, run social media ads, and sought online influencers to promote Project Jupiter’s permit.
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Think about that.
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The companies behind Project Jupiter can spend money on canvassers, advertising, influencers, and a campaign that allegedly submitted support letters under New Mexicans’ names without their permission.
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But they cannot manage to file their required jobs reports on time. They cannot provide the environmental assessments requested by the county. And they still have not answered basic questions about how this enormous project will affect our water, air, climate, and communities. Meanwhile, construction continues.
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But together, we can still stop this project from moving forward.Â

Read more from the Albuquerque Journal
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