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“We Take the Trash and Turn It Into Gas” — Brian Carmody on Greening the Data Center Boom Differently
Description
Cut The Tie Podcast with Brian Carmody
What happens when critical infrastructure grows faster than the systems meant to support it? In this episode of Cut The Tie, Thomas Helfrich sits down with Brian Carmody to explore the unseen strain data centers are placing on power grids across the country—and why relying on the grid alone is becoming a liability.
Brian shares how his journey from the military to corporate leadership and real estate development led him to a mission-driven model for powering data centers. By combining waste-to-energy systems, on-site power generation, and hydroponic farming, Brian and his team are cutting ties with the grid while giving more back to communities than they take. The result is a smarter, more resilient approach to energy, infrastructure, and growth.
About Brian Carmody:
Brian Carmody is the Director of Finance and Northeast Development at Renewed Developers, an energy and data center property development firm focused on sustainable, behind-the-meter infrastructure. With a background spanning military service, Fortune 50 corporate roles, manufacturing leadership, and real estate investment, Brian specializes in developing data center sites powered by waste-to-energy systems, natural gas generation, and on-site sustainability solutions that reduce grid dependency and revitalize local communities.
In this episode, Thomas and Brian discuss:
- Why data centers are straining the power grid
Brian explains how exponential growth in cloud computing and AI is outpacing grid capacity nationwide. - Turning waste into reliable energy
Municipal waste is converted into renewable gas to power data centers directly on-site. - What “behind the meter” really means
Generating power independently avoids multi-year grid interconnection delays. - Why solar and wind can’t support critical infrastructure alone
Data centers and hospitals require consistent, always-on power sources. - How hydroponic farms close the loop
Excess heat and energy are used to grow fresh food year-round for local communities. - The policy challenges slowing innovation
Rigid energy policies often ignore total emissions and real-world outcomes.
Key Takeaways:
- Grid dependence is a growing risk
Waiting years for interconnection stalls growth and limits infrastructure expansion. - Waste can be a power source
Trash, when processed correctly, becomes reliable, on-demand energy. - Behind-the-meter creates resilience
On-site generation gives developers speed, control, and certainty. - Infrastructure should give more than it takes
Energy, food, and tax revenue can all flow back to the community. - Practical transition beats idealism
Real-world solutions outperform rigid, all-or-nothing energy thinking.
Connect with Brian Carmody:
💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/briancarmody/
🌐 Website: https://renewdevelopers.com/
Connect with Thomas Helfrich:
🌐 Website: https://www.cutthetie.com
💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomashelfrich
📧 Email: t@instantlyrelevant.com
🚀 Instantly Relevant: https://www.instantlyrelevant.com
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