Data centers in Kansas
Kansas has 2 data center facilities on our map, across 2 cities including Topeka, Lenexa. Major operators include QTS, TierPoint. Click any facility to open it on the live interactive map with its estimated daily energy use, cost, and carbon footprint.
Open Kansas on the interactive map →
| Facility | Operator | City | Type | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QTS Topeka Data Center | QTS | Topeka | Colocation | baxtel.com - QTS Topeka ↗ |
| TierPoint Lenexa Data Center | TierPoint | Lenexa | Colocation | Kansas data centers ↗ |
Kansas's estimated environmental footprint
Summed across Kansas's 2 mapped facilities (~10 MW of representative IT draw), these are order-of-magnitude estimates — modelled from each facility's type and US grid/water averages, not metered readings.
Carbon assumes the US grid average of 384 gCO₂/kWh; water uses a 1.8 L/kWh on-site (and 9.4 L/kWh all-in) water-usage-effectiveness reference. Hyperscale campuses on cleaner or dirtier regional grids will vary widely. Method & references: Lawrence Berkeley National Lab / US DOE — 2024 US Data Center Energy Usage Report ↗ · US Energy Information Administration — electricity carbon intensity ↗ · IEA — Energy & AI (2025) ↗.
Sources for Kansas data centers
Each facility above is documented in a public source. Full list (2):
Data centers in Kansas: frequently asked questions
How many data centers are in Kansas?
Kansas has 2 mapped data center facilities, across 2 cities including Topeka, Lenexa. Each is plotted on the interactive map with an estimated daily energy use, electricity cost, and carbon footprint.
Which companies operate data centers in Kansas?
Operators on the map include QTS, TierPoint.
Where are most data centers located in Kansas?
Kansas's mapped data centers are concentrated around Topeka, Lenexa. Open any facility on the map to see its exact location, operator, and estimated footprint.
Are these Kansas energy and carbon figures measured?
No — energy, cost, and carbon are order-of-magnitude estimates derived from each facility's type and the regional electricity grid, not metered readings. They are for awareness and comparison, with data sources cited on the map.
What is the environmental impact of data centers in Kansas?
Combined, Kansas's 2 mapped facilities draw an estimated 0 TWh of electricity a year — roughly the yearly power of 4,465 homes — emitting about 18,501 metric tons of CO₂ and using on the order of 23 million gallons of cooling water (≈120 million gallons including upstream power generation). These are order-of-magnitude estimates from facility type and US grid/water averages, not metered readings.