The Times-Picayune 12-21-2025

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JETS AT SAINTS • NOON • CBS 1C

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S u n d ay, d e c e m b e r 21, 2025

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W A V E

WAVE GOODBYE

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Meta details water needs for big AI data center

Concerns raised as state backs plan for millions of gallons daily BY JOSIE ABUGOV Staff writer

Meta has detailed for the first time the large amount of water its artificial intelligence data center being built in rural northeast Louisiana will require, estimating the average daily use for the massive facility will be comparable to what around 17,000 residents consume each day. Water use by new data centers has become a major concern nationally as construction ramps up to feed the race to develop AI, with dwindling reserves blamed on the expansive computer warehouses in some states. Meta says consumption for its Louisiana facility will be sustainable, and state officials have agreed, citing modeling that has not raised significant concerns. Independent water researchers, however, caution that the facility’s actual use should be monitored closely, stressing the potential for negative effects if it consumes as much water as allowed. They also note a lack of state monitoring related to such water use, a gap that Louisiana officials similarly pointed out. The data center in Richland Parish is registered to consume more than 23 million gallons of water per day, or 8.4 billion gallons per year, according to state records and the company itself. If it were to

ä See META, page 12A STAFF PHOTO By SOPHIA GERMER

Tulane Green Wave linebacker Chris Rodgers, left, and quarterback Jake Retzlaff walk off the field after a loss to Ole Miss Rebels in a College Football Playoff game at Vaught Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday.

It’s déjà vu all over again for Tulane OXFORD, Miss. — Turns out the experts were right. The Wave was, indeed, in over its head in the College Football Playoff. There’s no way to sugarcoat what took place at VaughtHemingway Stadium on Saturday. The Rebels’ 41-10 rout of the Green Wave was every bit as lopsided as the final score indicated. Tulane, as the national pundits and analysts predicted, was outmanned and outclassed by Ole Miss — just as they were three months earlier in a 45-10 loss to the Rebels at this very same venue. “It was kinda like déjà vu-ish for us,” Tulane quarterback Jake Retzlaff said. The critics who said Tulane did not deserve a spot in the CFP didn’t have to wait long for validation. The Rebels’ dominance was evident from the outset.

Jeff Duncan ä SEE COMPLETE COVERAGE

OF THE TULANE GAME. PAGE 1C

Any thoughts Tulane harbored of avenging the ugly regularseason loss ended early. Before the Green Wave could clear the smoke from their eyes from the pregame fireworks show, they found themselves trailing 14-0. It was exactly the message Ole Miss wanted to send to the upstart Wave. The Rebels won the opening coin toss, elected to receive the ball and blitzed through the

Tulane defense for a touchdown in a head-spinning three plays. The gains went for 30, 25 and 20 yards, the latter coming on a touchdown run by Kewan Lacy. Their second drive was just as fierce, a four-play, 60-yard march capped by quarterback Trinidad Chambliss’ 4-yard scoring run. In less than a minute, the Rebels had exerted their superiority with shock-and-awe suddenness and ferocity. From there, it was merely a matter of naming the score for the Rebels, who sent the record crowd of 68,251 home happy with an early Christmas gift. Ole Miss’ physical superiority exhibited itself throughout but was most evident during a threeplay sequence midway through the third quarter. With Tulane trailing 24-3 and trying to claw its

ä See TULANE, page 9A

TREASURE HUNTING

Searching for sinker cypress is an art, finding fortune in the lumber barons’ leftovers BY AIDAN McCAHILL Staff writer

John Manuel starts his workday on the Tchefuncte River, near its mouth at Lake Pontchartrain. It’s a cloudless late morning, but as he accelerates past ritzy waterfront properties in Madisonville, the sun brings little relief from the December air. It’s one of those days that doesn’t feel like work to Manuel. With the boat running smoothly, his mind is free to focus on one thing: treasure hunting. “God made me to do this,” he says. “This is what I enjoy; this is all the skill sets I was given.” After turning a bend, only vegetation and the water he grew up on surround the homemade aluminum flatboat. He cuts the engine as it

ä See TREASURE, page 4A

WEATHER HIGH 78 LOW 63 © D. YURMAN 2024

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Business ......................1E Deaths .........................3B Nation-World................2A Classified ..................... 2F Living............................1D Opinion ........................6B Commentary ................7B Metro ...........................1B Sports ..........................1C

CABLE FLEX™ COLLECTION

13TH yEAR, NO. 131


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