ALEXANDRIA Va., April 20, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The recent report on child welfare issued by New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez uses ugly, Trump-style tactics to stereotype families caught up in the system, misunderstands basic data and is likely to worsen the very failures it highlights, according to a national child advocacy organization.

“One year ago, just as Attorney General Torrez was beginning his investigation of the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department, we warned that his investigation would fail if it left people out,” said Richard Wexler, executive director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform. “He left people out. The investigation failed.”

NCCPR released a comprehensive rebuttal to Torrez’s report Monday. These are the key points:

  • His report is largely right about the failings of CYFD: It is an agency lurching from crisis to crisis, incapable of truly protecting children.
  • But his report is dangerously wrong about the reasons for those failings. Torrez alleges that the system deliberately leaves children in danger because CYFD supposedly is hellbent on preserving families “at almost any cost.” He calls it a “systemic moral failing.”
  • Ignoring a mountain of contrary evidence, Torrez makes his case by taking a page from the Donald Trump playbook. Trump tries to boost support for his horrific immigration policies by reveling in the most gruesome stories concerning immigrants, stories that are, of course, entirely unrepresentative of immigrants as a whole. Torrez uses the same tactic. He relies the same way on horror stories about birth parents who torture and murder their children – stories that bear no resemblance to the overwhelming majority of parents who lose children to foster care.
  • In 2024, in 80% of cases in which children were forced into foster care in New Mexico, there was not even an allegation of physical or sexual abuse. In 59%, there was not even an allegation of any form of drug abuse. Far more common are cases in which family poverty is confused with neglect. In fact, in New Mexico in 2024, more children were placed in foster care because of inadequate housing than because of physical and sexual abuse combined. Torrez ignores all of this. In a 220-page report about child welfare in the state with the highest child poverty rate in America, the word poverty does not appear even once.
  • At one point, Torrez’s rhetoric borders on the rhetoric of conspiracy theory, when he points out that a shortage of foster parents gives CYFD “a built-in excuse” to leave children in dangerous homes.
  • Torrez’s approach makes all children less safe. It is likely to set off another foster-care panic, a sharp, sudden spike in the number of children torn from everyone they know and love and consigned to the chaos of foster care. Such a panic sent entries into care skyrocketing more than 40 percent between 2022 and 2023 – leading to an exponential increase in children forced into dangerous makeshift placements, such as CYFD offices.

That did enormous harm to the children needlessly taken, exposing them to emotional trauma that can be life-shattering. It also put them at risk of abuse in foster care. Multiple studies find abuse in one-quarter to one-third of family foster homes, with an even higher rate in group homes and institutions. At the same time, when a take-the-child-and-run mentality sets off a foster-care panic, it further overloads the system, making it even harder to find the relatively few children in real danger. Torrez’s false conclusion about the reasons CYFD is failing actually makes more likely the very horrors he rightly decries.

  • Study after study finds that, in typical cases, not the horror stories, children left in their own homes fare better in later life than even comparably-maltreated children placed in foster care. One study even finds that, in such direct comparisons, the foster youth are four times more likely to die by age 20. The most common cause of death: suicide.
  • When Torrez was asked about such studies at a news conference, he defended his own ignorance, declaring, “I’m not afforded the luxury of an academic view of public safety. I have to have a real view of public safety.” But the academic view he derides is based on a close, objective examination of the fates of tens of thousands of children. Not only does Torrez embrace the Trump approach to fearmongering, he also embraces the RFK Jr. approach to science – even when that may put children’s lives at risk. That makes his conclusions – unreal.
  • Torrez’s Trump-style approach diverts attention from the real reasons CYFD is failing – reasons cited over and over in the report itself: An underprepared, underqualified, undertrained, undersupervised workforce that’s horrendously overwhelmed – all problems that a foster-care panic can only worsen.
  • Torrez either misunderstood key data or chose to use it selectively. Contrary to his claims, there is no evidence that there is more child abuse in New Mexico than in other states (nor is there any evidence that there is less). And the staggering increase in children forced into makeshift placements occurred during the foster-care panic, not, as Torrez claims, when entries into foster care were decreasing. If there were a hotline to which one could report statistics abuse, Attorney General Torrez would have his rights to the calculator app on his phone terminated.
  • The Attorney General and his staff appear to have sought out the views only of those who would confirm their biases going in. Either that or they spoke to some who would contradict the report’s thesis, but chose to ignore them. The voices of birth parents whose children were needlessly taken, and even the voices of foster youth who say they should have been allowed to remain in their own homes, appear nowhere in the report.
  • Torrez did get some things right – including his condemnation of CYFD’s obsessive secrecy. And he’s right to bring a lawsuit about it. But he ignores real solutions that really could vastly improve CYFD and make all children safer.

“Attorney General Torrez has issued a report that indulges in horror stories in the manner of Donald Trump, ignores evidence and is likely to leave the system even worse,” Wexler said. “What might one call such a report? How about: a systemic moral failure.”

About NCCPR: The National Coalition for Child Protection Reform is a small, nonprofit child advocacy organization dedicated to trying to make the “child welfare” system better serve America’s most vulnerable children.  You can read all about our distinguished Board of Directors here and about what others in the field say about us here.    

For further information, contact
Richard Wexler, executive director (rwexler@nccpr.info)

Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/new-mexico-ags-child-welfare-report-is-dangerously-wrong-national-child-advocacy-group-says-302747320.html

SOURCE National Coalition for Child Protection Reform

Originally published by GoDaddy

SAN FRANCISCO and TEMPE, Ariz., April 20, 2026 /3BL/ – Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET), the leading connectivity cloud company, and GoDaddy (NYSE: GDDY), global leader in domains and tech for small businesses, today announced a strategic partnership to help give website owners and AI developers transparency and control over how their content is used by AI, while also supporting standards to better identify AI agents. Together, the companies aim to help bring identity, trust, and access to the agentic open web.

The Internet is currently undergoing a fundamental shift, expanding from a web of pages designed for humans to a web that is also designed to support agents acting on behalf of humans. Without clear standards and tools, this transition risks overwhelming website owners, including small businesses and content creators, with unidentifiable and potentially malicious bot traffic. There needs to be a way to ensure that website owners have the tools to easily identify, manage, and trust AI traffic.

Visibility and Control for AI Crawlers

Starting today, GoDaddy will integrate Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control into its website hosting platform, helping website owners, including small businesses and creators, globally gain visibility and control over how automated AI-powered crawlers access their website content. This helps website owners manage which AI crawlers can collect their information while helping keep their site protected.

Identity and Transparency for AI Agents

Beyond just controlling crawls to a site, the industry needs standardized ways to verify who operates an agent and what an agent is allowed to do. However, enforcing consistent identification methods for bots and agents that want to interact with web applications in a safe manner is a more nuanced problem. ANS is a global open standard introduced by GoDaddy that is designed to support consistent naming, verification, and discovery for AI agents across systems, using proven open standards, domain name system (DNS), and public key infrastructure (PKI). ANS enables website owners to distinguish legitimate AI agents from unidentified AI agents, including malicious impersonators, on the open web.

Cloudflare is committed to a transparent agentic web and supports ANS and the development of a broad range of verifiable agent identity standards. In 2025, Cloudflare also introduced Web Bot Auth as a new method of using cryptography to verify bot and agent traffic, as well as a Signature Agent Card to help agent developers transparently share their agent’s identity and purpose. With an open ecosystem of standards and methods for identifying agents, the agentic web can evolve with transparency built in by default.

Together, Cloudflare and GoDaddy aim to provide the technical architecture to move into the agentic web era and help to:

  • Enforce a permission-based model for the agentic web: GoDaddy is integrating Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control directly into its hosting experience. This allows any website owner to set their own terms—choosing to allow, block, or signal that payment is required—protecting the value of their content.
  • Build trust and transparency into AI-native commerce: Identifying a bot is no longer enough; we must enable them to transact. By supporting ANS and Web Bot Auth, Cloudflare and GoDaddy are providing the verifiable identity layer needed for a functional digital marketplace. This ensures that when an agent makes a request—whether for a data query or an autonomous purchase—its identity is cryptographically signed, creating the trust necessary for a sustainable value exchange.
  • Secure a fair value exchange in the Answer Engine era: As the Internet shifts from search-and-click to AI-generated answers, the traditional traffic-based business model is breaking. This partnership provides one technical solution to this economic challenge. By combining granular audit logs with transparent agent identity, GoDaddy and Cloudflare are helping enable an ecosystem where human-generated content remains the lifeblood of the web but is protected and compensated in an AI-first world.

“The Internet is evolving into a high-velocity, AI-driven ecosystem, and that requires a new kind of transparent infrastructure,” said Stephanie Cohen, Chief Strategy Officer at Cloudflare. “By putting tools like AI Crawl Control and open standards into the hands of website owners, we are providing essential underpinnings for a new Internet business model. We want to ensure that every creator has the tools to verify who is interacting with their site, while giving legitimate AI agents a secure, transparent way to participate in a thriving open web.”

“By working with Cloudflare on AI Crawl Control and championing the Agent Name Service, an open standard giving every agent a verifiable identity built on DNS, we are providing our customers the transparency they need to thrive in an AI-first world,” said GoDaddy Chief Strategy Officer, Jared Sine. “We move at the speed of the Internet, and we’re working with the broader industry to ensure the agentic open web does too.”

To learn more, check out the following resources:

About Cloudflare

Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET) is the leading connectivity cloud company. It empowers organizations to make their employees, applications and networks faster and more secure everywhere, while reducing complexity and cost. Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud delivers the most full-featured, unified platform of cloud-native products and developer tools, so any organization can gain the control they need to work, develop, and accelerate their business.

Powered by one of the world’s largest and most interconnected networks, Cloudflare blocks billions of threats online for its customers every day. It is trusted by millions of organizations – from the largest brands to entrepreneurs and small businesses to nonprofits, humanitarian groups, and governments across the globe.

Learn more about Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud at cloudflare.com/connectivity-cloud. Learn more about the latest Internet trends and insights at https://radar.cloudflare.com.

Follow us: Blog | X | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About GoDaddy

GoDaddy, the world’s largest domain name registrar, helps millions of entrepreneurs globally start, grow, and scale their businesses. People come to GoDaddy to name their idea, build a website and logo, sell their products and services and accept payments. GoDaddy Airo®, the company’s AI-powered experience, makes growing a small business faster and easier by helping them to get their idea online in minutes, drive traffic and boost sales. GoDaddy’s expert guides are available 24/7 to provide assistance. To learn more about the company, visit www.GoDaddy.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements because they contain words such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expect,” “explore,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “could,” “intend,” “target,” “project,” “contemplate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” or “continue,” or the negative of these words, or other similar terms or expressions that concern Cloudflare’s expectations, strategy, plans, or intentions. However, not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. Forward-looking statements expressed or implied in this press release include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the capabilities and effectiveness of Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control and Cloudflare’s other products and technology, the benefits to Cloudflare’s customers from using Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control and Cloudflare’s other products and technology, Cloudflare’s partnership with GoDaddy and the potential resulting benefits to Cloudflare customers, the potential opportunity for Cloudflare to attract additional customers and to expand sales to existing customers through Cloudflare’s partnership with GoDaddy, Cloudflare’s technological development, future operations, growth, initiatives, or strategies, and comments made by Cloudflare’s Chief Strategy Officer and others. Actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied in forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including but not limited to, risks detailed in Cloudflare’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including Cloudflare’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on February 26, 2026, as well as other filings that Cloudflare may make from time to time with the SEC.

The forward-looking statements made in this press release relate only to events as of the date on which the statements are made. Cloudflare undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made in this press release to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this press release or to reflect new information or the occurrence of unanticipated events, except as required by law. Cloudflare may not actually achieve the plans, intentions, or expectations disclosed in Cloudflare’s forward-looking statements, and you should not place undue reliance on Cloudflare’s forward-looking statements.

© 2026 Cloudflare, Inc. All rights reserved. Cloudflare, the Cloudflare logo, and other Cloudflare marks are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Cloudflare, Inc. in the U.S. and other jurisdictions. All other marks and names referenced herein may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Originally published by GoDaddy

SAN FRANCISCO and TEMPE, Ariz., April 20, 2026 /3BL/ – Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET), the leading connectivity cloud company, and GoDaddy (NYSE: GDDY), global leader in domains and tech for small businesses, today announced a strategic partnership to help give website owners and AI developers transparency and control over how their content is used by AI, while also supporting standards to better identify AI agents. Together, the companies aim to help bring identity, trust, and access to the agentic open web.

The Internet is currently undergoing a fundamental shift, expanding from a web of pages designed for humans to a web that is also designed to support agents acting on behalf of humans. Without clear standards and tools, this transition risks overwhelming website owners, including small businesses and content creators, with unidentifiable and potentially malicious bot traffic. There needs to be a way to ensure that website owners have the tools to easily identify, manage, and trust AI traffic.

Visibility and Control for AI Crawlers

Starting today, GoDaddy will integrate Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control into its website hosting platform, helping website owners, including small businesses and creators, globally gain visibility and control over how automated AI-powered crawlers access their website content. This helps website owners manage which AI crawlers can collect their information while helping keep their site protected.

Identity and Transparency for AI Agents

Beyond just controlling crawls to a site, the industry needs standardized ways to verify who operates an agent and what an agent is allowed to do. However, enforcing consistent identification methods for bots and agents that want to interact with web applications in a safe manner is a more nuanced problem. ANS is a global open standard introduced by GoDaddy that is designed to support consistent naming, verification, and discovery for AI agents across systems, using proven open standards, domain name system (DNS), and public key infrastructure (PKI). ANS enables website owners to distinguish legitimate AI agents from unidentified AI agents, including malicious impersonators, on the open web.

Cloudflare is committed to a transparent agentic web and supports ANS and the development of a broad range of verifiable agent identity standards. In 2025, Cloudflare also introduced Web Bot Auth as a new method of using cryptography to verify bot and agent traffic, as well as a Signature Agent Card to help agent developers transparently share their agent’s identity and purpose. With an open ecosystem of standards and methods for identifying agents, the agentic web can evolve with transparency built in by default.

Together, Cloudflare and GoDaddy aim to provide the technical architecture to move into the agentic web era and help to:

  • Enforce a permission-based model for the agentic web: GoDaddy is integrating Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control directly into its hosting experience. This allows any website owner to set their own terms—choosing to allow, block, or signal that payment is required—protecting the value of their content.
  • Build trust and transparency into AI-native commerce: Identifying a bot is no longer enough; we must enable them to transact. By supporting ANS and Web Bot Auth, Cloudflare and GoDaddy are providing the verifiable identity layer needed for a functional digital marketplace. This ensures that when an agent makes a request—whether for a data query or an autonomous purchase—its identity is cryptographically signed, creating the trust necessary for a sustainable value exchange.
  • Secure a fair value exchange in the Answer Engine era: As the Internet shifts from search-and-click to AI-generated answers, the traditional traffic-based business model is breaking. This partnership provides one technical solution to this economic challenge. By combining granular audit logs with transparent agent identity, GoDaddy and Cloudflare are helping enable an ecosystem where human-generated content remains the lifeblood of the web but is protected and compensated in an AI-first world.

“The Internet is evolving into a high-velocity, AI-driven ecosystem, and that requires a new kind of transparent infrastructure,” said Stephanie Cohen, Chief Strategy Officer at Cloudflare. “By putting tools like AI Crawl Control and open standards into the hands of website owners, we are providing essential underpinnings for a new Internet business model. We want to ensure that every creator has the tools to verify who is interacting with their site, while giving legitimate AI agents a secure, transparent way to participate in a thriving open web.”

“By working with Cloudflare on AI Crawl Control and championing the Agent Name Service, an open standard giving every agent a verifiable identity built on DNS, we are providing our customers the transparency they need to thrive in an AI-first world,” said GoDaddy Chief Strategy Officer, Jared Sine. “We move at the speed of the Internet, and we’re working with the broader industry to ensure the agentic open web does too.”

To learn more, check out the following resources:

About Cloudflare

Cloudflare, Inc. (NYSE: NET) is the leading connectivity cloud company. It empowers organizations to make their employees, applications and networks faster and more secure everywhere, while reducing complexity and cost. Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud delivers the most full-featured, unified platform of cloud-native products and developer tools, so any organization can gain the control they need to work, develop, and accelerate their business.

Powered by one of the world’s largest and most interconnected networks, Cloudflare blocks billions of threats online for its customers every day. It is trusted by millions of organizations – from the largest brands to entrepreneurs and small businesses to nonprofits, humanitarian groups, and governments across the globe.

Learn more about Cloudflare’s connectivity cloud at cloudflare.com/connectivity-cloud. Learn more about the latest Internet trends and insights at https://radar.cloudflare.com.

Follow us: Blog | X | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram

About GoDaddy

GoDaddy, the world’s largest domain name registrar, helps millions of entrepreneurs globally start, grow, and scale their businesses. People come to GoDaddy to name their idea, build a website and logo, sell their products and services and accept payments. GoDaddy Airo®, the company’s AI-powered experience, makes growing a small business faster and easier by helping them to get their idea online in minutes, drive traffic and boost sales. GoDaddy’s expert guides are available 24/7 to provide assistance. To learn more about the company, visit www.GoDaddy.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which statements involve substantial risks and uncertainties. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements because they contain words such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expect,” “explore,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “could,” “intend,” “target,” “project,” “contemplate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” or “continue,” or the negative of these words, or other similar terms or expressions that concern Cloudflare’s expectations, strategy, plans, or intentions. However, not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. Forward-looking statements expressed or implied in this press release include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the capabilities and effectiveness of Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control and Cloudflare’s other products and technology, the benefits to Cloudflare’s customers from using Cloudflare’s AI Crawl Control and Cloudflare’s other products and technology, Cloudflare’s partnership with GoDaddy and the potential resulting benefits to Cloudflare customers, the potential opportunity for Cloudflare to attract additional customers and to expand sales to existing customers through Cloudflare’s partnership with GoDaddy, Cloudflare’s technological development, future operations, growth, initiatives, or strategies, and comments made by Cloudflare’s Chief Strategy Officer and others. Actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied in forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including but not limited to, risks detailed in Cloudflare’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including Cloudflare’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed on February 26, 2026, as well as other filings that Cloudflare may make from time to time with the SEC.

The forward-looking statements made in this press release relate only to events as of the date on which the statements are made. Cloudflare undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements made in this press release to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this press release or to reflect new information or the occurrence of unanticipated events, except as required by law. Cloudflare may not actually achieve the plans, intentions, or expectations disclosed in Cloudflare’s forward-looking statements, and you should not place undue reliance on Cloudflare’s forward-looking statements.

© 2026 Cloudflare, Inc. All rights reserved. Cloudflare, the Cloudflare logo, and other Cloudflare marks are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of Cloudflare, Inc. in the U.S. and other jurisdictions. All other marks and names referenced herein may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Local leaders across Georgia can now see a more detailed picture of what impacts to expect from climate change with a new map tool released by Drawdown Georgia.

The group, which aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions, unveiled the maps at the Super South Summit in Atlanta last week.

Scientists warn that Georgia can expect hotter, longer summers, more extreme weather, more rainfall overall and also longer droughts. But those impacts will vary across the state.

Now, researchers have found ways to scale down big-picture data so they can project not just how climate change is affecting Georgia or the Southeast broadly, but also how it’s changing conditions in specific locations.

Read the full story on WABE.

Local leaders across Georgia can now see a more detailed picture of what impacts to expect from climate change with a new map tool released by Drawdown Georgia.

The group, which aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions, unveiled the maps at the Super South Summit in Atlanta last week.

Scientists warn that Georgia can expect hotter, longer summers, more extreme weather, more rainfall overall and also longer droughts. But those impacts will vary across the state.

Now, researchers have found ways to scale down big-picture data so they can project not just how climate change is affecting Georgia or the Southeast broadly, but also how it’s changing conditions in specific locations.

Read the full story on WABE.

Local leaders across Georgia can now see a more detailed picture of what impacts to expect from climate change with a new map tool released by Drawdown Georgia.

The group, which aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions, unveiled the maps at the Super South Summit in Atlanta last week.

Scientists warn that Georgia can expect hotter, longer summers, more extreme weather, more rainfall overall and also longer droughts. But those impacts will vary across the state.

Now, researchers have found ways to scale down big-picture data so they can project not just how climate change is affecting Georgia or the Southeast broadly, but also how it’s changing conditions in specific locations.

Read the full story on WABE.

Local leaders across Georgia can now see a more detailed picture of what impacts to expect from climate change with a new map tool released by Drawdown Georgia.

The group, which aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions, unveiled the maps at the Super South Summit in Atlanta last week.

Scientists warn that Georgia can expect hotter, longer summers, more extreme weather, more rainfall overall and also longer droughts. But those impacts will vary across the state.

Now, researchers have found ways to scale down big-picture data so they can project not just how climate change is affecting Georgia or the Southeast broadly, but also how it’s changing conditions in specific locations.

Read the full story on WABE.

Local leaders across Georgia can now see a more detailed picture of what impacts to expect from climate change with a new map tool released by Drawdown Georgia.

The group, which aims to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas emissions, unveiled the maps at the Super South Summit in Atlanta last week.

Scientists warn that Georgia can expect hotter, longer summers, more extreme weather, more rainfall overall and also longer droughts. But those impacts will vary across the state.

Now, researchers have found ways to scale down big-picture data so they can project not just how climate change is affecting Georgia or the Southeast broadly, but also how it’s changing conditions in specific locations.

Read the full story on WABE.

Antea Group’s Data Center EHSxTech® events continue to bring together environmental, health, and safety (EHS) leaders from across the data center industry to share insights, challenges, and solutions in a rapidly evolving landscape.

Across recent events in the U.S. and Europe, a consistent message has emerged: as data center growth accelerates, EHS must evolve from a compliance function to a strategic driver of safety, resilience, and operational performance.

Highlights from Our Most Recent Event

  • Air permitting increasingly becoming a critical project risk. Delays or denials in regulatory approval can halt development, with increasing complexity across jurisdictions, growing public scrutiny, and a need for specialized expertise.
  • EHS compliance ownership is getting more complex. Varying business models (e.g., triple net leases, multi-party operations) are making it harder to clearly define responsibility for permitting and ongoing compliance.
  • Power availability is a primary constraint. Grid limitations and moratoriums are pushing developers to rethink site selection and invest in onsite generation and alternative energy solutions.
  • Community expectations are reshaping development. Scrutiny around energy, water, noise, and land use is driving stricter permitting and higher expectations for transparency and engagement. Industry advocacy has never been more important.
  • Self-performing operations are changing EHS models. As organizations move away from outsourced operations, they need stronger internal systems, technical expertise, and workforce training.
  • Workforce shortages are impacting safety and execution. Rapid growth is outpacing skilled labor availability, increasing pressure on training, competency, and retention.

Core Trends Across Data Center EHSxTech® Events

1. AI in EHS: From Experimentation to Everyday Operations

Across all events, AI has rapidly evolved from a curiosity to a practical tool embedded in daily EHS activities.

Organizations are using AI to:

  • Summarize incidents and generate reports
  • Review safety documentation and RAMS
  • Develop training materials and toolbox talks
  • Analyze safety observations and prioritize risks
  • Optimize daily document review and e-mail management

What’s changed most is scale and normalization. AI is now becoming part of standard workflows instead of just viewed as a new tool on the block. However, companies consistently emphasize the importance of governance, data privacy, and human oversight.

2. Safety by Design: Eliminating Risk Before It Exists

A recurring theme across every event is the shift toward designing safety into data centers from the very beginning.

Best practices include:

  • Embedding safety reviews at key design stages (30/60/90%)
  • Incorporating technician and operational feedback early
  • Designing for ergonomics, access, and maintenance safety
  • Integrating sensors and monitoring for predictive maintenance

This approach reflects a broader mindset shift: the safest risks are the ones removed before operations begin.

3. Managing High-Risk Activities (HRAs)

As data centers scale, organizations are aligning around a more consistent and structured approach to high-risk work.

Key focus areas include:

  • Standardizing definitions of HRAs across organizations
  • Identifying and verifying critical controls
  • Embedding HRA checks into planning and execution, not just documentation
  • Measuring effectiveness through leading indicators

Examples of HRAs frequently discussed include electrical work, confined spaces, lifting operations, and vehicle movements.

4. From Lagging Metrics to Meaningful Insights

Traditional safety metrics are no longer enough. Across events, participants emphasized the need to move beyond incident rates toward more actionable indicators.

Emerging approaches include:

  • Tracking the percentage of high-risk work with verified controls
  • Measuring time to close corrective actions
  • Using AI to filter and prioritize observations
  • Integrating safety with operational performance metrics

Measure what actually prevents incidents, not just what reports them.

5. Contractor and Supply Chain Risk Management

Data centers are inherently multi-employer environments, making contractor management a critical EHS priority.

Common challenges include:

  • Limited visibility into subcontractors
  • Inconsistent safety standards across vendors
  • Communication gaps during project execution
  • Influx of employees with limited to no industry experience

Leading practices highlighted across events:

  • Early EHS involvement during contracting
  • Strong prequalification and onboarding processes
  • Clear contractual safety expectations
  • Continuous monitoring and performance evaluation

Organizations are increasingly treating supplier quality and contractor safety as directly linked to operational risk.

6. Operational Realities: Heat, Noise, and Lone Work

While innovation is accelerating, many core operational risks remain constantly complex.

Key topics discussed include:

  • Heat stress in both indoor and outdoor environments
  • Noise exposure from high-density equipment and cooling systems
  • Risks associated with lone workers in 24/7 operations

Solutions range from engineering controls and PPE innovations to monitoring technologies and improved communication systems.

7. Energy, Power, and Sustainability Challenges

The rapid expansion of data centers is placing new pressure on energy infrastructure and creating new EHS considerations.

Key discussion areas:

  • Grid capacity constraints and onsite generation
  • Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) risks
  • Cooling strategies and water use
  • Emerging technologies like SMRs and carbon capture

EHS professionals are increasingly expected to play a role in:

  • Assessing community and environmental risks
  • Supporting emergency preparedness for new energy systems
  • Engaging with regulators and stakeholders

This is where EHS and sustainability are clearly converging.

8. Building a Culture of Safety and Collaboration

Across all events, one constant stands out: collaboration is essential.

Whether its sharing lessons learned, aligning on best practices, or addressing industry-wide challenges, these events reinforce the value of open dialogue.

EHS leaders are not just regulators, they are:

  • Educators
  • Facilitators
  • Strategic partners

And increasingly, they are responsible for helping organizations navigate complexity while maintaining a strong culture of safety.

Key Takeaways for Data Center EHS Leaders

  • Treat AI as an enabler, but implement it with governance and purpose
  • Design safety into every phase of the data center lifecycle
  • Focus on high-risk activities and verify critical controls in real conditions
  • Move beyond traditional metrics toward leading indicators that drive prevention
  • Strengthen contractor and supplier safety programs
  • Address operational risks with both technology and human-centered solutions
  • Engage early in energy and infrastructure decisions
  • Prioritize collaboration to solve industry-wide challenges

Conclusion: Advancing Together

One of the most valuable outcomes of Data Center EHSxTech® events is the opportunity to step outside of day-to-day operations and learn from peers facing similar challenges, but the real impact happens in what comes next.

As the industry continues to evolve, the focus is shifting from sharing ideas to applying them at scale—embedding lessons learned into design decisions, operational practices, and performance metrics across organizations.

The challenges ahead, from AI integration to energy infrastructure and high-risk work, will continue to grow in complexity. Meeting them will require not just collaboration, but consistency, accountability, and a willingness to evolve how EHS is implemented across the data center lifecycle.

By turning insight into action, EHS leaders are responding to change and helping define what safe, resilient data center operations look like in the future.

Want to attend the next gathering of data center EHS thought leaders? Contact us to get involved!

The Tire Emissions Research Conference is an event supported by the Tire Industry Project (TIP), and is taking place on 8-10 December 2026 in Cambridge, England.

Building on the strong momentum of last year’s edition, the 2026 conference will take place at Jesus College in the University of Cambridge, focusing exclusively on discussing scientific research and promoting actionable solutions in tire emissions.

Engage with experts as they address the critical challenges and opportunities in reducing tire and road wear emissions.

Learn about the latest research and its impact, including mitigation strategies on use-phase tire emissions.

2026 Tire Emissions Research Conference topics

1. Tire and road emissions generation and characterization (particulates and constituents)
This section is expected to cover the following topics:

  • The levels of and types of emissions per kilometer/mile, including average emissions (emission factors) and considering influent factors (driving style, vehicle, road, climate, etc.)
  • What do we know about potential particles of nanometer size from tires?
  • What do we know about physical/chemical characteristics of tire emissions and TRWP in particular (e.g., density, size distribution)?

2. Environmental distribution and fate of tire emissions
This section is expected to cover the following topics:

  • Analytical methods for quantification of tire emissions in different environmental compartments.
  • Sampling and modeling of tire emissions of distribution in different environmental compartments.  

3. Behavior and impact of tire emissions on the environment (Environmental impact of tire emissions) 
This section is expected to cover the following topics:

  • Transformation and interactions of TRWP, rubber, and associated additives in the environment.
  • Measurement of TRWP leachates in environment.
  • Ecotoxicity and mode of action of TRWP/Leachates/Transformation products.  

4. Design alternatives  
This section is expected to cover innovation and new approaches pertaining to the development and adoption of tire and vehicle design alternatives with the potential to reduce the generation and/or impact of tire emissions such as: 

  • Tire designs.
  • Alternative tire materials.
  • Vehicle design.
  • Vehicle mounted capture devices.
  • Impacts of EV vs conventional internal combustion engine on tire emissions. 

5. Civil engineering measures and environmental practices for mitigation of TRWP and chemicals
This section is expected to cover the following topics:

  • Roadside runoff and stormwater management technologies and practices.
  • Vehicle capture device technologies and practices.
  • Wastewater treatment technologies and practices.
  • Road surface and compositional impacts.
  • Street cleaning techniques and management practices.
  • Analytical characterization of stormwater composition.

Why attend?

Be part of a science-based conference dedicated to discussing tire emissions research and addressing actionable solutions.

Collaborate and share insights with leading experts.

Who is it for?

This independent conference is focused on collaboration and designed for scientists, regulators, NGOs, and academia who are actively pursuing science-based research and solutions relating to tire and road wear emissions.

Click here to read more.

Abstracts

Abstract submission is open for the 2026 Tire Emissions Research Conference! 

Why submit an abstract? 

  • Present your work on a global stage and give it more visibility.
  • Connect with experts around the world who share your research interest.
  • Contribute to promoting actionable solutions in tire and road wear emissions.

Deadline approaching: 11 May 2026

Click below to submit your abstract.

Submit your abstract

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