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BOSC BOSC Lima Ottawa River · Lima, OH Building Under construction #1261 URB Urbana Mad River · Great Miami Live Investigating #1263 DEF Defiance Maumee mainstem Queued Investigating #1264 FIN Findlay Blanchard River Queued Investigating #1265 TOL Toledo Lucas Co WRRF Queued Investigating #1266 VWT Van Wert Town Creek · Little Auglaize Queued Investigating #1267 BRY Bryan Prairie Creek · Tiffin River Queued Investigating #1268 OTW Ottawa Blanchard River (lower) Queued Investigating #1269 SPR Springfield Mad River · Great Miami Queued Investigating #1270 XEN Xenia Little Miami Queued Investigating #1271 WPA Dayton · WPAFB Mad River · Great Miami Queued Investigating #1272 HAM Hamilton · Middletown Great Miami (lower) Queued Investigating #1273 TRP Troy · Piqua Great Miami (upper) Queued Investigating #1274 SID Sidney Great Miami · headwaters Queued Investigating #1275 GRV Greenville · Darke Co Stillwater · basin divide Queued Investigating #1276 WIL Wilmington Todd Fork · Little Miami Queued Investigating #1277 WUN West Union · Adams Co Ohio Brush Creek · Ohio River Queued Investigating #1278 NAL New Albany · Licking Scioto ↔ Muskingum divide Tracking Investigating #1279 COL Columbus Scioto · Olentangy Tracking Investigating #1280 CSH Coshocton Tuscarawas + Walhonding Tracking Investigating #1281 PIK Piketon Scioto River · PORTS Tracking Investigating #1282 SAN Sandusky · Perkins Twp Sandusky Bay · Lake Erie Tracking Investigating #1283 NWK Newark Licking River Tracking Investigating #1284 ZAN Zanesville Muskingum mainstem Tracking Investigating #1285 FRE Fremont · Clyde Lower Sandusky Tracking Investigating #1286 TIF Tiffin Sandusky (mid) Tracking Investigating #1287 BUC Bucyrus Sandusky headwaters Tracking Investigating #1288 CLE Cleveland Lower Cuyahoga Tracking Investigating #1289 AKR Akron Upper Cuyahoga · CVNP Tracking Investigating #1290 LRD Lordstown · Warren Upper Mahoning Tracking Investigating #1291 YNG Youngstown Mahoning mainstem Tracking Investigating #1292 LAN Lancaster Upper Hocking Tracking Investigating #1293 ATH Athens Lower Hocking Tracking Investigating #1294 LOG Logan Hocking Hills Tracking Investigating #1295
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OH Ohio 34
BOSC BOSC Lima Ottawa River · Lima, OH Draft Under construction #1261 URB Urbana Mad River · Great Miami Open Investigating #1263 DEF Defiance Maumee mainstem Queued Investigating #1264 FIN Findlay Blanchard River Queued Investigating #1265 TOL Toledo Lucas Co WRRF Queued Investigating #1266 VWT Van Wert Town Creek · Little Auglaize Queued Investigating #1267 BRY Bryan Prairie Creek · Tiffin River Queued Investigating #1268 OTW Ottawa Blanchard River (lower) Queued Investigating #1269 SPR Springfield Mad River · Great Miami Queued Investigating #1270 XEN Xenia Little Miami Queued Investigating #1271 WPA Dayton · WPAFB Mad River · Great Miami Queued Investigating #1272 HAM Hamilton · Middletown Great Miami (lower) Queued Investigating #1273 TRP Troy · Piqua Great Miami (upper) Queued Investigating #1274 SID Sidney Great Miami · headwaters Queued Investigating #1275 GRV Greenville · Darke Co Stillwater · basin divide Queued Investigating #1276 WIL Wilmington Todd Fork · Little Miami Queued Investigating #1277 WUN West Union · Adams Co Ohio Brush Creek · Ohio River Queued Investigating #1278 NAL New Albany · Licking Scioto ↔ Muskingum divide Watching Investigating #1279 COL Columbus Scioto · Olentangy Watching Investigating #1280 CSH Coshocton Tuscarawas + Walhonding Watching Investigating #1281 PIK Piketon Scioto River · PORTS Watching Investigating #1282 SAN Sandusky · Perkins Twp Sandusky Bay · Lake Erie Watching Investigating #1283 NWK Newark Licking River Watching Investigating #1284 ZAN Zanesville Muskingum mainstem Watching Investigating #1285 FRE Fremont · Clyde Lower Sandusky Watching Investigating #1286 TIF Tiffin Sandusky (mid) Watching Investigating #1287 BUC Bucyrus Sandusky headwaters Watching Investigating #1288 CLE Cleveland Lower Cuyahoga Watching Investigating #1289 AKR Akron Upper Cuyahoga · CVNP Watching Investigating #1290 LRD Lordstown · Warren Upper Mahoning Watching Investigating #1291 YNG Youngstown Mahoning mainstem Watching Investigating #1292 LAN Lancaster Upper Hocking Watching Investigating #1293 ATH Athens Lower Hocking Watching Investigating #1294 LOG Logan Hocking Hills Watching Investigating #1295
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Building
Chapter 4 of 6 · the story

What it does to the water

A data center cools itself with water, and the water it gives back is not the water it takes — evaporation is a permanent loss to the basin. Before asking what the campus removes, read what the receiving streams can spare. Ohio EPA already wrote it down, in the low-flow number it uses to set the limits on every discharge.

Record Teardown

NPDES fact sheet — the 7Q10 screen

Ohio EPA · American II WWTP · permit 2PH00006 (Dug Run)
● in the published bundle
Permit fact sheet · text-native
① The source
facility_name
Allen County American II Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP)
permit_no
2PH00006*LD
permit_action
renewal
applicant
Allen County Board of Commissioners, 3230 North Cole Street, Lima, OH 45801
application_no
OH0037338
public_notice_no
211697
public_notice_date
2025-04-28

View the source document →

Stream Flows table · Ohio EPA · NPDES fact sheets
7Q10 values are read from the Ohio EPA fact sheets committed in the corpus; the fact-sheet PDFs are available on request.
② What we read from it
Receiving water
Dug Run · impaired
7Q10 design low flow
0.78 cfs
1Q10 (driest week)
0.6 cfs
Summer 30Q10
0.96 cfs
Stated acute dilution
1.3 : 1
Ottawa mainstem 7Q10
0.2 cfs
Ottawa 1Q10 (driest week)
0 cfs · nearly dry
● figures read live from the published record · ~ markers preserved as approximate
③ What it reveals

Ohio EPA sizes every discharge against the stream's design low flow — and the Ottawa this project discharges into runs at just 0.2 cfs, dropping to zero in the driest weeks. The tributaries are worse: American II's own fact sheet states a dilution of barely 1.3 to 1. The receiving water is near-undiluted before this project adds a drop.

④ How to check it
[verified]fact-sheet 7Q10

The river is already effluent

What the campus discharges into[verified] · fact-sheet discharge

Before the campus takes a drop, read what the river already carries. At design low flow the three county WWTPs discharge 8.82 cfs of treated effluent into streams whose natural low flow totals just 1.01 cfs — and the campus adds its own routed 3.87 cfs FM-2 discharge. The Ottawa leaving Lima runs 93% treated effluent, before counting a drop of what the campus evaporates.

Streams · natural low flow1.01 cfs
Treated effluent · WWTP + campus12.69 cfs
The three county WWTP discharges vs their receiving streams’ cited 7Q10 — each already runs undiluted at design low flow.
DischargerReceiving streamDischarge7Q10
Shawnee II WWTPOttawa River4.64 cfs0.20 cfs
American Bath WWTPPike Run2.32 cfs0.03 cfs
American II WWTPDug Run1.86 cfs0.78 cfs

⌖ docs/HYDROLOGY.md §1 · feed assimilative (Ohio EPA NPDES fact sheets) + the cited campus FM-2 routed discharge

That is what the campus discharges into. It also takes water out of the basin: a data center cools by evaporation, and the water it gives back is not the water it takes. But read the next comparison carefully — it is a worst-case bound, not the operating reality. Lima doesn’t pump from the river at low flow; it draws from five off-stream reservoirs filled at high flow. So setting the campus’s net loss against the Ottawa’s low flow measures the scale of the basin stress, not a withdrawal from the river — the honest tag is [inference], not [verified].

There is a second reason the draw is modeled rather than read. The one number that would settle it — the cooling system’s design flowrate — was claimed by the developer as a trade secret, and Ohio EPA granted the claim on 2025-10-08 (eDoc 3859883). The justification is unusually candid about the stakes: the air permit, it argues, is “the only public document that requests the size” of the equipment, so “by preventing this information from becoming public via the air permitting process, the facility has taken a significant step to ensure the confidentiality of this information.” The flowrate is not missing by accident — the single public path to it was identified and closed. So we model the draw, tag it [inference], and can say precisely why the [verified] figure does not exist.

And because the screen is built from live gauges, you don’t have to take a static number on faith — the hydrology dashboard re-runs it against the Ottawa’s current flow from USGS on every build.

What the campus takes out of the basin

Net consumptive loss at full buildout (4.85 cfs, from 3.92 MGD cooling × 0.8 consumptive) as a scale against the Ottawa’s low-flow floors. The campus draws from reservoirs, not the river — a worst-case bound, [inference].

SeasonOttawa low flowLoss ÷ low flowSource
Annual 7Q100.20 cfs24×Ohio EPA NPDES fact sheet 2IG00001 (Ottawa at Lima, USGS 04187100)
Summer 30Q101.60 cfs3.0×data/reference/hydrology/low-flow-7q10.yaml · Ottawa River context (Ohio EPA NPDES 2IG00001, USGS 04187100)
Driest week 1Q100.00 cfs∞ (dry)data/reference/hydrology/low-flow-7q10.yaml · Ottawa River context (Ohio EPA NPDES 2IG00001, USGS 04187100)

Now weigh that against what the proponents say. AEDG’s own FAQ assures that data centers “increasingly use closed-loop cooling systems that recirculate water” — but the air permit you read in the last chapter fixes 36 evaporative cooling towers, and evaporative towers lose water to the sky by design. Google’s “120% water replenishment” pledge is real, but it’s global and offsite — it says nothing about the Ottawa. The tower count is [verified]; the consumptive draw above is [inference]; the claim that this “reduces water use” here is neither.

Where the water goes when it's done cooling

The water an evaporative tower doesn’t lose to the sky comes back dirtier than it left. The towers concentrate whatever is in the make-up water — dissolved salts, treatment chemicals — into a waste stream called blowdown, and that stream has to go somewhere. For Project BOSC, the somewhere is on the record. In August 2024 — more than a year before the public knew whose data center this was — the County Commissioners approved Resolution #679-24: a $47,600 task order to MS Consultants for a “WWTP Data Center Flows Treatment Evaluation,” studying the campus blowdown’s demands, its flows over a typical year, and its water-quality parameters for storage and treatment at the American Bath WWTP — the County to gather the figures from “the developer and data center manufacturer.” It is the first primary-source document tying the cooling system to the public sewer. [verified], from the produced record.

What that study scopes, the build-out commits to: a dedicated BOSC pump station and dual forcemains — a 10-inch line to the American Bath plant and a 16-inch line to Lima’s existing 78-inch interceptor, sized for 2.5 MGD peak (Res #137-26). The campus’s waste heat leaves the site as water, and the public sewer system is being enlarged to receive it — the cost of that enlargement is the next chapter’s business.

It starts in a soybean field

All of it lands on ground that drains the wrong way for it. Of the ~340 acres assembled into the campus (the Brenneman → Bistrozzi LLC deed — the number the landing headlines), roughly 309 acres of former CAUV farmland are the graded stormwater footprint — the construction-stormwater coverage (facility 2GC08468, Turner Construction) was modified to 309.2 acres in June 2026 — graded to discharge into Pike Run, a headwater tributary of the same Ottawa system the 7Q10 above describes. Two on-site isolated wetlands, 0.33 acres of Category-1 (0.29 forested, 0.04 not), were authorized for fill on 2025-08-12, the loss offset by credits bought at the Pearson Metropark mitigation bank a county away (eDoc 3788677).

A broader fill across the site’s 358-acre wetland delineation went differently. The developer applied for it on 2025-12-09 — the day after the first erosion-control inspection recorded clearing and mass grading already underway — and Ohio EPA returned the application incomplete two weeks later, for missing an analysis of practicable on-site alternatives (eDoc 3949585). The corpus doesn’t show how that one resolved. What it shows is the order: the earth was moving before the wider wetland question was answered. Analysis of the produced record, not a legal conclusion.

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