US grapples with power demands of Big Tech data centres


US electric utilities are fielding massive requests for new power capacity as Big Tech scours the country for viable locations for new data centres to keep up with the compute demands of AI.

A survey of 13 major US electric utility earnings transcripts found nearly half have received inquiries from data centre companies for volumes of power that would exceed their peak demand or existing generation capacity – that’s everything they supply to homes and businesses – a metric that reflects the sheer size of oncoming data centre needs.

The power industry is struggling with a question that will determine the course of billions of dollars in investment: How to meet the demand?

Utilities have announced billions of additional dollars in capital spending already this year, with some doubling their five-year investment plans.

If utilities underestimate the demand, they risk an unstable electrical grid with a higher chance of blackouts for their customers. If they overbuild, consumer rate-payers could end up with the tab.

A coal power plant in Iowa. Credit: Reuters

Complicating matters, tech companies are approaching multiple power utility providers within the same state, or across several states seeking multiple bids for the same project, inflating power demand outlooks, investors and other power experts said.

“What we’re seeing is this huge proposed influx of these abstract projects that nobody knows anything about,” Jon Gordon, a director at the clean energy trade group, Advanced Energy United, whose members include clean power and large energy users like data centres.

The size and secrecy of the inquiries are making it very difficult for utilities to predict future demand.

“The data centre process is to have a competitive bid from three companies in many markets,” said James Richmond, chief executive of e2Companies, an energy management system provider. “That one-third, automatically, is going to win, and two-thirds is going to drop out.”

Meeting big demands

In one example, Sempra said that its Texas power utility subsidiary Oncor Electric, which serves the Dallas area, has received requests to connect an additional 119 gigawatts, which is nearly four times the peak electricity use on its system.

Allentown, Pennsylvania-based PPL said it had more than 50 GW of data center requests, including at least 9 GW in advanced stages of development, which is higher than its current generation capacity of 7.2 GW.

Oncor said it only includes data centres in its spending plan once it has signed agreements with the developer or operator and has secured collateral in the form of a letter of credit, an affiliate guarantee or cash.

“We believe these agreements help incentivise accurate information sharing and the certainty of project planning,” company spokesperson Kerri Dunn said.

A PPL spokesperson said the company only authorises spending on a particular project with an agreement in place.

In utility Evergy’s territory in Kansas and Missouri, the pipeline of additional demand driven by data centres has nearly doubled to more than 11 GW late 2024, which is slightly more than the maximum demand the utility’s entire system is expected to see at any one point in 2025.

States are beginning to take notice. As a way to gain insight into the swelling demand forecasts, Pennsylvania is considering creating a “clearinghouse” for data centre power requests, a representative from the Pennsylvania governor’s office said during a recent industry panel discussion.

“It’s something that we’re looking at pretty intensely,” said Jacob Finkel, deputy secretary of policy for Governor Josh Shapiro.

‘Risk of overbuild’

Big Tech may also decide to abandon projects, which take years to come to fruition, due to inflation, rising interest rates, and scarce land.

In 2024, the cost for building a megawatt was nearly $12 million, according to multiple industry sources. But costs to build out data centres have risen sharply since then, Mr Richmond said.

Growing capital costs, which may be intensified by tariffs on materials such as steel imposed by US President Donald Trump, may also limit the amount utilities will be able to build to meet demand, said Barclays’ analyst Nick Campanella.

“There is risk of overbuild,” he said.

In addition to rising costs, there are also signs the needs of next-generation AI applications may be changing.

New AI models like DeepSeek promise to require less compute, and therefore potentially far less electricity, by requiring a small fraction of the chips that are currently being deployed in data centres.

Fewer chips could mean less power and infrastructure needed to support them, including the energy-guzzling cooling systems that are among the main reasons why data centres use so much energy.

TD Cowen analysts in recent weeks said Microsoft – among the world’s top spenders on AI data centres, with plans to invest $80 billion this year – had pulled back from projects representing 2 GW of electricity in the United States and Europe in the last six months.

Reuters

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