xAI installs 59 gas turbines for Colossus 2 project without federal clean air permits Elon Musk's AI company xAI installed 59 natural gas turbines for its Colossus 2 supercomputer project in Tennessee and Mississippi without obtaining required federal clean air permits, operating for months near predominantly Black communities already facing high pollution levels. The Southern Environmental Law Center flagged the emissions as an environmental justice issue, and a Senate committee in April 2026 highlighted the practice as part of a broader trend among data center operators. xAI installs 59 gas turbines for Colossus 2 project without federal clean air permits Elon Musk's AI company operated dozens of natural gas turbines near Black communities in Tennessee and Mississippi while skirting Clean Air Act requirements Elon Musk’s AI company xAI has been running natural gas turbines across two supercomputer sites in the Memphis, Tennessee area without obtaining the federal clean air permits required under the Clean Air Act. The turbines power xAI’s Colossus AI supercomputer cluster, and they’ve been operating in communities that were already dealing with elevated pollution levels. The company apparently tried to sidestep the permitting process entirely by classifying the turbines as “mobile” units eligible for a 364-day temporary-use exemption, given that the turbines are powering a permanent supercomputer facility. Two sites, one playbook The installations span two locations. At the Colossus 1 site in South Memphis, thermal imagery identified over 30 turbines operating as of April 2025. At the Colossus 2 site across the state line in Southaven, Mississippi, at least 27 unpermitted gas turbines were running as of January 2026. xAI eventually began applying for permits in January 2026, starting with an initial application covering 15 turbines. The company later expanded that request to include an additional 41 units at the Southaven location. One permit for turbines at the Memphis facility was issued back in July 2025, but the bulk of the operation had been running without regulatory approval for months before any paperwork was filed. Environmental justice concerns take center stage The turbines burn natural gas and produce nitrogen oxides, a pollutant closely linked to respiratory illness and smog formation. Both the South Memphis and Southaven sites sit near predominantly Black neighborhoods that already face disproportionately high environmental burdens. The Southern Environmental Law Center flagged the situation, arguing that the emissions represent a textbook environmental justice issue. The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America also weighed in, highlighting that the affected communities already experience elevated rates of asthma and other respiratory conditions. In April 2026, a Senate committee highlighted xAI’s turbine operations as part of a broader pattern of data center operators running gas-fired power plants without proper permits, framing it not as an isolated incident but as an emerging trend. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .