Project Jupiter

The Numbers Nobody Published

Public sources. Reproducible math. No opinion.

Analysis 1: Water

Do we have enough water?

Data center cooling requires millions of gallons per day. How much of El Paso's water surplus does that consume?

DC demand = 17.9% of supply surplus

The conclusion changes from "we're fine" to "we're over capacity" depending on which supply number you use. No public document specifies which number decision-makers used.

Read the water analysis →
Analysis 2: Electrical Grid

Does the grid have enough power?

El Paso Electric's grid margin is 127 MW. Data centers on that grid need 250 MW. A permitted power plant is larger than the entire existing grid.

DC load = 197% of grid surplus

The power plant size stated to county commissioners (700-900 MW) does not match the air quality permits filed with the state (2,880 MW). The permitted microgrid is 125% the size of El Paso Electric's entire system.

Read the grid analysis →

How These Work

Sourced

Every number links to a public document: press releases, regulatory filings, news reports, government records. No anonymous tips. No leaked documents. No opinion.

Reproducible

Every calculation can be checked with a calculator and the cited sources. The math is shown step by step. If your numbers differ, publish the correction with your source.

Accessible

Each analysis has four tiers: residents (6th grade reading level), journalists (sourced tables), technical (full equations), and Spanish. Pick the one that fits you.

Timestamped

Content hashes are anchored to the Solana blockchain before publication. This proves when the analysis was written and that it has not been modified.

Verify Everything

You do not need to trust the author. You do not need to know who the author is. Download the source documents. Run the equations. Check the results. The math either holds or it does not.