TL;DR

Southaven Buildout: Elon Musk’s xAI is said to be expanding Southaven with 19 added gas turbines. Operating Total: The site’s turbine count could rise to 46 after Mississippi set a 41-turbine permit line. Permit Baseline: Mississippi approved the permit on March 10, 2026, after 27 unpermitted units were already operating. Local Stakes: Residents said turbine noise disrupted sleep and daily life as regulators and courts review the site.

Elon Musk’s xAI is planning to expand its Southaven Colossus 2 site with 19 portable gas turbines added between late March and early May 2026, a change that could lift the operating total to 46 after Mississippi set a 41-turbine permit line.

On March 10, 2026, Mississippi regulators issued an air permit for 41 gas turbines at the site.

xAI is fighting a lawsuit over whether its turbine operations needed proper air permits which already tied the company’s turbine operations to a broader dispute. No public xAI explanation accompanied the higher Southaven count in the material behind the story.

Portable gas turbines are on-site generators, not minor support equipment. Each added unit can change how much power the facility can produce, how much emissions scrutiny it draws, and how sharply the operating footprint diverges from a permit line built around a smaller number of machines.

How the Document Trail Raised the Count

Public-records material obtained through a public records request tied the additions to exchanges between a Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality official and a Trinity Consultants representative. MDEQ and any reviewing court now have a document trail that points to added generating capacity rather than an incidental site change.

In the same package, the spreadsheet’s Total Power Output column treated the added units as generation equipment. If the reported count is accurate, the difference between the March permit ceiling and the early-May operating tally would be five turbines, which turns the dispute into a direct question about compliance and enforcement.

In practice, that five-turbine gap would force regulators to explain a site scale that may already exceed the number Mississippi approved in March 2026, and it would also sharpen questions over whether future enforcement focuses on permit revision, operating limits, or court-ordered changes to the way xAI powers the site today.

Permit Timeline and Earlier Warnings

Mississippi moved quickly before the latest additions came into view. State regulators completed a three-week permit timeline after the public comment period ended.

During that review, 27 unpermitted turbines were already operating at the Southaven site while the state reviewed the permanent-turbine application. By March 10, 2026, the permit had arrived only after on-site generation was already a live enforcement issue. xAI has been using 35 methane turbines at its South Memphis data center.

The array represented about 422 megawatts of generating capacity, nearly matching a Tennessee Valley Authority gas plant in Brownsville, Tennessee.

Permit applications in that earlier episode covered fewer turbines than the aerial images showed. Separate Southaven background material also placed 27 gas turbines at Colossus 2 with up to 495 megawatts of capacity, giving the newer 46-turbine figure a concrete historical baseline rather than an isolated count. Together, the Memphis and Southaven records show that turbine-count disputes around xAI sites were not confined to one date or one location.

Noise Complaints Show the Local Stakes

Noise complaints make the dispute local and personal. For Devan Jenkins, a resident quoted about turbine noise near Southaven, the project disrupted daily life and made it hard for her to fall asleep.

For Jenkins, a deep drone seeped through walls and windows and often grew worse at night. For residents, the same turbine count translates into sleep disruption, indoor noise, and uncertainty about whether any authority will limit operations.

“You can feel it rattling your eardrums, It makes you feel like you’re going insane.”

Devan Jenkins, resident (via Mississippi Free Press)

Jason Haley, another resident describing all-day turbine noise, said the generators produced a constant low hum that could be heard both outside and inside his home. Courts or regulators will now decide whether xAI must bring the documented Southaven footprint back within the site’s 41-turbine permit boundary or explain why the added generators can keep running.