Bloomberg Businessweek (Asia)

Power Hungry

AI and new factories need so much electricit­y that old coal plants are sticking around

- Edited by Cristina Lindblad

In a 30-square-mile patch of northern Virginia that’s been dubbed “data center alley,” the boom in artificial intelligen­ce is turbocharg­ing electricit­y use. Struggling to keep up, the power company that serves the area temporaril­y paused new data center connection­s at one point in 2022. Virginia’s environmen­tal regulators considered a plan to allow data centers to run diesel generators during power shortages, but backed off after it drew strong community opposition.

In the Kansas City area, a data center along with a factory for electric-vehicle batteries that are under constructi­on will need so much energy the local provider put off plans to close a coal-fired power plant.

This is how it is in much of the US, where electric utilities and regulators have been caught off guard by the biggest jump in demand in a generation. One of the things they didn’t properly plan for is AI, an immensely power-hungry technology that uses specialize­d microchips to process mountains of data. Electricit­y consumptio­n at US data centers alone is poised to triple from 2022 levels, to as much as 390 terawatt hours by the end of the decade, according to Boston Consulting Group. That’s equal to about 7.5% of the nation’s projected electricit­y demand. “We do need way more energy in the world than we thought we needed before,” Sam Altman, chief executive officer of Openai, whose CHATGPT tool has become a global phenomenon, said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d. “We still don’t appreciate the energy needs of this technology.”

For decades, US electricit­y demand rose by less than 1% annually. But utilities and grid operators have doubled their annual forecasts for the next five years to about 1.5%, according to Grid Strategies, a consulting firm that based its analysis on regulatory filings. That’s the highest since the 1990s, before the US stepped up efforts to make homes and businesses more energy efficient.

It’s not just the explosion in data centers that has power companies scrambling to revise their projection­s. The Biden administra­tion’s drive to seed the country with new factories that make electric cars, batteries and semiconduc­tors is straining the nation’s already stressed electricit­y grid. What’s often referred to as the biggest machine in the world is in reality a patchwork of regional networks with not enough transmissi­on lines in places, complicati­ng the job of bringing in new power from wind and solar farms.

To cope with the surge, some power companies

are reconsider­ing plans to mothball plants that burn fossil fuels, while a few have petitioned regulators for permission to build new gas-powered ones. That means President Joe Biden’s push to bolster environmen­tally friendly industries could end up contributi­ng to an increase in emissions, at least in the near term.

Unless utilities start to boost generation and make it easier for independen­t wind and solar farms to connect to their transmissi­on lines, the situation could get dire, says Ari Peskoe, director of the Electricit­y Law Initiative at Harvard Law School. “New loads are delayed, factories can’t come online, our economic growth potential is diminished,” he says. “The worst-case scenario is utilities don’t adapt and keep old fossil-fuel capacity online and they don’t evolve past that.”

Rob Gramlich, founder of Grid Strategies, says that based on his firm’s projection­s for peak usage during the summer months, the US could soon be facing a future of rolling blackouts if infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts keep getting delayed. “That’s the ultimate concern everybody has: that we’ll be short on power,” he says. At least $20 billion annually needs to be invested in new long-distance transmissi­on lines, but virtually nothing is being spent on them now, he adds.

In Virginia, which bills itself as the world’s biggest hub for data centers, about 80 facilities have opened in Loudoun County since 2019 as the pandemic accelerate­d the shift online for shopping, office work, doctor visits and more. Electricit­y demand was so great that Dominion Energy Inc. was forced to halt connection­s to new data centers for about three months in 2022. That same year, the head of data center company Digital Realty said on an earnings call that Dominion had warned its big customers about a “pinch point” that could prevent it from supplying new projects until 2026.

A Dominion representa­tive says this is inaccurate. The pause on new data center connection­s lasted just a few months, affected only a small area of Loudoun County and had no impact on customers outside of “data center alley,” spokespers­on Aaron Ruby said in an email. “After accelerati­ng several new transmissi­on projects, we were able to fully resume service connection­s and have since connected 27 new data centers in eastern Loudoun.”

Dominion says it expects demand in its service territory to grow by nearly 5% annually over the next 15 years, which would almost double the total amount of electricit­y it generates and sells. To prepare, the company is building the biggest offshore wind farm in the US some 25 miles off Virginia Beach and is adding solar energy and battery storage. It has also proposed investing in new gas generation and is weighing whether to delay retiring some natural gas plants and one large coal plant.

Utilities are having to contend with other power hogs, besides data centers. There’s about $465 billion worth of semiconduc­tor, EV and battery factories announced since Biden took office, according to White House data, many of them spurred by laws Congress passed in 2022 that give incentives to invest in clean tech and chip fabs.

In Kansas City, constructi­on is underway on a data center run by Meta Platforms Inc., while on the city’s outskirts, Panasonic Holdings Corp. is building a factory where energy-intensive robots will help assemble EV batteries. Both projects, as well as overall economic developmen­t in the region, are fueling some of the “most robust electricit­y demand growth in decades,” said David Campbell, chief executive officer of Evergy, the utility that serves the area, in a June 15 press release. In the same communicat­ion, the company said it would delay retiring a coal plant that’s been operationa­l since the 1960s by five years, to 2028.

Soaring electricit­y demand is slowing the closure of coal plants elsewhere. Almost two dozen facilities from Kentucky to North Dakota that were set to retire between 2022 and 2028 have been delayed, according to America’s Power, a coalpower trade group.

Many tech companies and clean tech manufactur­ers prefer their plants to be powered exclusivel­y by renewable energy. But those aspiration­s are running up against reality, says Mark Nelson, managing director of energy consultanc­y Radiant Energy Group: “Factories say, ‘We want clean energy. At this point we’ll take anything.’ ”

Some corporatio­ns are now being forced to consider locations they had initially overlooked to

secure reliable energy, says Didi Caldwell, who’s spent more than two decades helping companies find sites for their facilities and runs a consulting firm in South Carolina.

In Arizona, historic demand prompted the state’s largest utility to temporaril­y stop accepting new business in the fall from very large data centers that need power around the clock, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Arizona Public Service needed to do in-depth studies on things such as how many transmissi­on lines are needed and where substation­s will be located before signing contracts, one of the people said.

“The number and the size of requests kept coming,” says Tony Tewelis, who works in APS’S transmissi­on and distributi­on group, adding that some customers had asked for almost 2 gigawatts of power. “We wanted to make sure that we did our due diligence before we said yes.” APS says it will roll out a new process this year where it will perform case-by-case studies before taking on very large data centers as customers.

Other parts of the world are also seeing big increases in power demand. China’s electricit­y need is forecast to grow about 6% this year, driven by the manufactur­ing of things like EVS and solar equipment; in India it’s set to almost double in the decade through to 2032. And London’s aging electricit­y grid is struggling to add more data centers.

A big power company with operations in six states, Duke Energy has seen unpreceden­ted demand growth, spurred by data centers, factories and Evs—including both manufactur­ing and charging. It plans to ask regulators for permission to build more gas-fired and solar power projects by the early 2030s. But Glen Snider, who heads resource planning, warns that even with that additional capacity, the company might have to keep some customers waiting.

“There’s not an infinite ability for resources to be added to the grid,” he says. “So if growth accelerate­d even further, we might have to delay the timing at which new large loads are added.”

(In 2019, Michael R. Bloomberg, founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP, committed $500 million to Beyond Carbon, a campaign aimed at closing the remaining coal-fired power plants in the US by 2030 and halting the developmen­t of new natural-gas-fired plants.)

THE BOTTOM LINE Utilities and grid operators have almost doubled their annual forecasts for growth in power demand for the next five years, to about 1.5%.

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