Missouri Data Center Market

The Missouri data center market is located in the region of Midwest US and within United States. Missouri has 67 facilities with 4,715,196 sqft and 531 megawatts.

The top providers in Missouri are Google (5 sites) and Meta with 3 facilities . The most popular facilities are 210 N Tucker (Netrality) St Louis Carrier Hotel and TierPoint St Louis-Olive.

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Market Facts

Missouri Data Center Map

Missouri Power Growth Over Time

Operational
Construction
Planned
Prospective
In Doubt
Withdrawn
+565650% since 1996
Operational
across NN Request Dataset sites
Under Construction
NN Request Dataset sites currently building
Planned / Prospective
announced for 1996–2032

Largest Providers in Missouri

Google
Site
Power
Operational
2
160.0
Construction
3
Planned
5
Prospective Expansion
1
Land Bank
0
In Doubt
0
Withdrawn
0
Decommissioned
0
Totals
5
View Provider
Meta
Site
Power
Operational
3
150.0
Construction
0
Planned
0
Prospective Expansion
0
Land Bank
0
In Doubt
0
Withdrawn
0
Decommissioned
0
Totals
3
View Provider
Patmos
Site
Power
Operational
1
35.0
Construction
1
Planned
1
Prospective Expansion
0
Land Bank
0
In Doubt
0
Withdrawn
0
Decommissioned
0
Totals
2
View Provider
Nebius
Site
Power
Operational
1
15.0
Construction
1
Planned
1
Prospective Expansion
0
Land Bank
1
In Doubt
0
Withdrawn
0
Decommissioned
0
Totals
2
View Provider

Largest Data Centers in Missouri

Regions in Missouri

  • St Louis

    • Facilities: 24
    • Power: 62 megawatts
    • Under Construction: 2 sites
  • Kansas City

    • Facilities: 35
    • Power: 448 megawatts
    • Under Construction: 7 sites

About This Metro

Climate

Missouri’s weather, with a four-season climate and an average annual temperature of 57 degrees Fahrenheit, enables free cooling for data centers for up to half of the year (NOAA, Comparative Climactic Data through 2010). About 58 percent of Missouri’s days are sunny. That’s more than 200 days a year, which is ideal for solar-powered data centers.

Tax Incentives

Missouri’s data center incentives include state and local sales and use tax exemptions for qualified equipment, machinery, and utilities. Incentives also include exemptions from state and local sales and use taxes on purchases of tangible personal property and materials for data center construction. New data centers are required to invest at least $25 million and create 10+ new jobs paying at least 150 percent of the county average wage.

Electric Utility

Missouri’s industrial electricity costs averaged 6.19 cents/kWh in 2014—13 percent lower than the U.S. average.

Missouri utility company KCP&L offers additional incentives to make their service area attractive to new and expanding businesses, including their Economic Development Rider (EDR) discount, which provides a discounted rate over five years, from 30 percent in the first year to 10 percent during the last.

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