{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "bskyPostRef": {
    "cid": "bafyreihhmzyejumqyotexgwsfwev35okwfmcb7ixmux6i3cj7ecnowolge",
    "uri": "at://did:plc:mg5ozsljpp6t5b4lvwys4t72/app.bsky.feed.post/3lzwoprcdxrs2"
  },
  "coverImage": {
    "$type": "blob",
    "ref": {
      "$link": "bafkreiclh36l5zgvutdpx6h77s5ygdd4rx5zecumh3u774mn4rsartryae"
    },
    "mimeType": "image/jpeg",
    "size": 50356
  },
  "description": "Private investment firms that are helping finance America’s AI race and the huge buildout of energy-hungry data centers are getting interested in the utilities that deliver electricity.",
  "path": "/private-equity-sees-profits-in-power-utilities-as-big-tech-seeks-more-energy/",
  "publishedAt": "2025-09-28T23:49:20.000Z",
  "site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
  "tags": [
    "strong incentives",
    "power plants",
    "ChatGPT",
    "power sources they share",
    "Google could build",
    "data center there",
    "growing evidence suggests",
    "battles erupting around the U.S.",
    "100% of their electricity"
  ],
  "textContent": "HARRISBURG, Pa., Sept. 28, 2025 (AP) — Private investment firms that are helping finance America’s artificial intelligence race and the huge buildout of energy-hungry data centers are getting interested in the local utilities that deliver electricity to regular customers — and the servers that power AI.\n\nBillions of dollars from such firms are now flowing toward electric utilities in places including New Mexico, Texas, Wisconsin and Minnesota that deliver power to more than 150 million customers across millions of miles of power lines.\n\n“The reason is very simple: because there’s a lot of money to be made,” said **Greg Brown** , a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor of finance who researches private equity and hedge funds.\n\nPrivate investment firms that have done well investing in infrastructure over the last 15 years now have strong incentives to add data centers, power plants and the services that support them at a time of rapid expansion and spiking demand ignited by the late 2022 debut of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Brown said.\n\nBlackRock's CEO **Larry Fink** said as much in a July interview on CNBC, saying infrastructure is “at the beginning of a golden age.”\n\n“We believe that there’s a need for trillions of dollars investing in infrastructure related to our power grids, AI, the whole digitization of the economy\" and energy, Fink said.\n\n### _Deals are in the works_\n\nIn recent weeks, private equity firm Blackstone (a financial company separate from from BlackRock) has sought regulatory approval to buy out a pair of utilities, Albuquerque-based Public Service Company of New Mexico and Lewisville, Texas-based Texas New Mexico Power Co.\n\nWisconsin earlier this year granted the buyout of the parent of Superior Water, Light and Power and the owner of Northern Indiana Public Service Co. last year sold a 19.9% stake in the utility to Blackstone.\n\nHowever, a fight has erupted in Minnesota over the buyout of the parent of Duluth-based Minnesota Power and the outcome could determine how such firms expand their holdings in an industry that's a nexus between regular people, gargantuan data centers and the power sources they share.\n\nUnder the proposed deal, a BlackRock subsidiary and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board would buy out the publicly traded Allete, parent of Minnesota Power, which provides power to 150,000 customers and owns a variety of power sources, including coal, gas, wind and solar.\n\nBoth sides of the fight have attracted influential players ahead of a possible Oct. 3 vote by the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission. Raising the stakes is the potential that Google could build a data center there, a lucrative prospect for whoever owns Minnesota Power.\n\nOpponents of the acquisition suspect that BlackRock is only interested in squeezing bigger profits from regular ratepayers. Allete makes the opposite argument, that BlackRock can show more patience because it is free of the short-term burdens of publicly traded companies.\n\n### _More buyouts worry opponents_\n\nOpponents also worry that a successful Minnesota Power buyout will launch more such deals around the U.S. and drive up electric bills for homes.\n\n“It's no secret that private equity is extremely aggressive in chasing profits, and when it comes to utilities, the profit motive lands squarely on the backs of ratepayers who don’t have a choice of who they buy their electricity from,” said **Karlee Weinmann** of the Energy and Policy Institute, which pushes utilities to keep rates low and use renewable energy sources.\n\nThe buyout proposals come at a time when electricity bills are rising fast across the U.S., and growing evidence suggests that the bills of some regular Americans are rising to subsidize the rapid buildout of power plants and power lines to supply the gargantuan energy needs of Big Tech’s data centers.\n\n**Mark Ellis** , a former utility executive-turned-consumer advocate who gave expert testimony against the Minnesota Power buyout, said he's talked to private equity firms that want to get into the business of electric utilities.\n\n“It’s just a matter of what’s the price and will the regulator approve it,” Ellis said. “The challenge is they’re not going to come up for sale very often.”\n\nThat's because electric utilities are seen as valuable long-term investments that earn around 10% returns not on the electricity they deliver, but the upcharge that utility regulators allow on capital investments, like upgrading poles, wires and substations.\n\nThat gives utility owners the incentive to spend more so they can make more money, critics say.\n\n### _Big players on both sides_\n\nThe fight over Minnesota Power resembles some of the battles erupting around the U.S. where residents don’t want a data center campus plunked down next to them.\n\nBuilding trades unions and the administration of Democratic Gov.**Tim Walz** , who appointed or reappointed all five utility commissioners, are siding with Allete and BlackRock.\n\nOn the other side are the state attorney general’s office and the industrial interests that buy two-thirds of Minnesota Power's electricity, including U.S. Steel and other owners of iron ore mines, Enbridge-run oil pipelines and pulp and paper mills.\n\nIn its petition, Allete told regulators that, under BlackRock's ownership, Minnesota Power's operations, strategy and values wouldn't change and that it doesn't expect the buyout price — $6.2 billion, including $67 a share for stockholders at a 19% premium — to affect electric rates.\n\nIn essence, Allete — which solicited bids for a buyout — argues that BlackRock's ownership will benefit the public because, under it, the utility will have an easier time raising the money it needs to comply with Minnesota’s law requiring utilities to get 100% of their electricity from carbon-free sources by 2040.\n\nAllete has projected needing to spend $4.3 billion on transmission and clean energy projects over five years.\n\nHowever, opponents say Allete's suggestion that it'll struggle to raise money is unfounded, and undercut by its own filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in which it says it is “well positioned” to meet its financing needs.\n\n### _Skepticism from regulators_\n\nIt hasn't been smooth sledding for BlackRock.\n\nIn July, an administrative law judge, **Megan J. McKenzie** , recommended that the commission reject the deal, saying that the evidence reveals the buyout group's “intent to do what private equity is expected to do – pursue profit in excess of public markets through company control.”\n\nIn recent days, a utility commission staff analysis echoed McKenzie's concerns.\n\nThey suggested that private investors could simply load up Minnesota Power's parent with massive debts, borrow at a relatively low interest rate and turn a fat profit margin from the utility commission granting a generous rate of return.\n\n“For the big investors in private equity, this is a win-win,” the staff wrote. “For the ratepayers of the highly leveraged utility, this represents paying huge profits to the owners if the private equity ‘wins’ and dealing with a bankrupt utility provider if it loses – it is a lose-lose.”\n\n _This article was written by Marc Levy of the Associated Press._",
  "title": "Private Equity Sees Profits in Power Utilities as Big Tech Seeks More Energy",
  "updatedAt": "2026-03-11T05:45:19.382Z"
}