The AI Thirst Problem: How the Global Data Centre Boom Is Draining Communities From Georgia to Gujarat A scandal over 29 million gallons of unmetered water in suburban Atlanta has cast a harsh light on a systemic resource conflict—one that is now being exported, at $210 billion scale, to some of India's most water-stressed states. Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan Compiled from Politico, Fortune, EPA, Brookings Institution, Earth Journalism Network, SANDRP, World Resources Institute When residents of Annelise Park, a leafy subdivision 20 miles south of Atlanta, noticed their water pressure dropping last year, local authorities issued a conservation advisory and asked households to stop watering their lawns. The culprit, it turned out, was not a drought—though Georgia was in the midst of one—but a 615-acre data centre campus codenamed Project Excalibur. The facility, developed by Quality Technology Services (QTS), a company owned by Blackstone, the New York-based private equity giant,...
India’s Borrowed Future How a ₹279-lakh-crore debt binge is mortgaging the next generation’s jobs and prosperity Chuppala Nagesh Bhushan HYDERABAD, June 2026— There is an old joke in Indian politics: a rupee promised today is worth more than a rupee repaid tomorrow. Governments have long understood this arithmetic. What they have been slower to grasp is that the reverse is equally true—a rupee borrowed today is a rupee that a young Indian cannot borrow tomorrow to build a factory, start a business, or find a decent job. India’s combined central and state government debt now stands at a staggering ₹279 lakh crore (₹279 trillion), roughly equivalent to the entire annual output of Germany. The central government alone owes ₹197 lakh crore; state governments have piled up another ₹82 lakh crore. Against a total banking system deposit base of roughly ₹640 lakh crore, governments are absorbing nearly 44% of all available credit. The remaining scraps must be divided be...