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  "description": "Because of the impact that future plants pose to current ratepayers, state regulators want proof that proposed data centers will actually get built.",
  "path": "/future-data-centers-are-driving-up-forecasts-for-energy-states-want-proof-theyll-be-built/",
  "publishedAt": "2025-11-16T20:17:47.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "new data centers",
    "artificial intelligence investment bubble",
    "tech stock prices",
    "which is attracting",
    "data center projects",
    "blackout"
  ],
  "textContent": "HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov. 16, 2025 (AP) — The forecasts are eye-popping: utilities saying they'll need two or three times more electricity within a few years to power massive new data centers that are feeding a fast-growing AI economy.\n\nBut the challenges — some say the impossibility — of building new power plants to meet that demand so quickly has set off alarm bells for lawmakers, policymakers and regulators who wonder if those utility forecasts can be trusted.\n\nOne burning question is whether the forecasts are based on data center projects that may never get built — eliciting concern that regular ratepayers could be stuck with the bill to build unnecessary power plants and grid infrastructure at a cost of billions of dollars.\n\nThe scrutiny comes as analysts warn of the risk of an artificial intelligence investment bubble that's ballooned tech stock prices and could burst.\n\nMeanwhile, consumer advocates are finding that ratepayers in some areas — such as the mid-Atlantic electricity grid, which encompasses all or parts of 13 states stretching from New Jersey to Illinois, as well as Washington, D.C. — are already underwriting the cost to supply power to data centers, some of them built, some not.\n\n“There’s speculation in there,” said Joe Bowring, who heads Monitoring Analytics, the independent market watchdog in the mid-Atlantic grid territory. “Nobody really knows. Nobody has been looking carefully enough at the forecast to know what’s speculative, what’s double-counting, what’s real, what’s not.”\n\n###  _Suspicions about skyrocketing demand_\n\nThere is no standard practice across grids or for utilities to vet such massive projects, and figuring out a solution has become a hot topic, utilities and grid operators say.\n\nUncertainty around forecasts is typically traced to a couple of things.\n\nOne concerns developers seeking a grid connection, but whose plans aren't set in stone or lack the heft — clients, financing or otherwise — to bring the project to completion, industry and regulatory officials say.\n\nAnother is data center developers submitting grid connection requests in various separate utility territories, PJM Interconnection, which operates the mid-Atlantic grid, and Texas lawmakers have found.\n\nOften, developers, for competitive reasons, won't tell utilities if or where they've submitted other requests for electricity, PJM said. That means a single project could inflate the energy forecasts of multiple utilities.\n\nThe effort to improve forecasts got a high-profile boost in September, when a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission member asked the nation’s grid operators for information on how they determine that a project is not only viable, but will use the electricity it says it needs.\n\n“Better data, better decision-making, better and faster decisions mean we can get all these projects, all this infrastructure built,” the commissioner, **David Rosner** , said in an interview.\n\nThe Edison Electric Institute, a trade association of for-profit electric utilities, said it welcomed efforts to improve demand forecasting.\n\n### _Real, speculative, or ‘somewhere in between’_\n\nThe Data Center Coalition, which represents tech giants like Google and Meta and data center developers, has urged regulators to request more information from utilities on their forecasts and to develop a set of best practices to determine the commercial viability of a data center project.\n\nThe coalition's vice president of energy, **Aaron Tinjum** , said improving the accuracy and transparency of forecasts is a “fundamental first step of really meeting this moment” of energy growth.\n\n“Wherever we go, the question is, ‘Is the (energy) growth real? How can we be so sure?’” Tinjum said. “And we really view commercial readiness verification as one of those important kind of low-hanging opportunities for us to be adopting at this moment.”\n\n**Igal Feibush** , the CEO of Pennsylvania Data Center Partners, a data center developer, said utilities are in a “fire drill” as they try to vet a deluge of data center projects all seeking electricity.\n\nThe vast majority, he said, will fall off because many project backers are new to the concept and don't know what it takes to get a data center built.\n\nStates also are trying to do more to find out what’s in utility forecasts and weed out speculative or duplicative projects.\n\nIn Texas, which is attracting large data center projects, lawmakers still haunted by a blackout during a deadly 2021 winter storm were shocked when told in 2024 by the grid operator, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, that its peak demand could nearly double by 2030.\n\nThey found that state utility regulators lacked the tools to determine whether that was realistic.\n\nTexas state Sen. **Phil King** told a hearing earlier this year that the grid operator, utility regulators and utilities weren’t sure if the power requests “are real or just speculative or somewhere in between.”\n\nLawmakers passed legislation sponsored by King, now law, that requires data center developers to disclose whether they have requests for electricity elsewhere in Texas and to set standards for developers to show that they have a substantial financial commitment to a site.\n\n### _Electricity bills are rising, too_\n\nPPL Electric Utilities, which delivers power to 1.5 million customers across central and eastern Pennsylvania, projects that data centers will more than triple its peak electricity demand by 2030.\n\n**Vincent Sorgi** , president and CEO of PPL Corp., told analysts on an earnings call this month that the data center projects “are real, they are coming fast and furious” and that the “near-term risk of overbuilding generation simply does not exist.”\n\nThe data center projects counted in the forecast are backed by contracts with financial commitments often reaching tens of millions of dollars, PPL said.\n\nStill, PPL's projections helped spur a state lawmaker, Rep. **Danilo Burgos** , to introduce a bill to bolster the authority of state utility regulators to inspect how utilities assemble their energy demand forecasts.\n\nRatepayers in Burgos' Philadelphia district just absorbed an increase in their electricity bills — attributed by the utility, PECO, to the rising cost of wholesale electricity in the mid-Atlantic grid driven primarily by data center demand.\n\nThat's why ratepayers need more protection to ensure they are benefiting from the higher cost, Burgos said.\n\n“Once they make their buck, whatever company,” Burgos said, “you don’t see no empathy towards the ratepayers.”\n\n _This article was written by Marc Levy of the Associated Press._",
  "title": "Future Data Centers are Driving Up Forecasts for Energy; States Want Proof They'll Be Built",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-16T21:51:17.643Z"
}