Thursday, January 25th 2024
AI Power Consumption Surge Strains US Electricity Grid, Coal-Powered Plants Make a Comeback
The artificial intelligence boom is driving a sharp rise in electricity use across the United States, catching utilities and regulators off guard. In northern Virginia's "data center alley," demand is so high that the local utility temporarily halted new data center connections in 2022. Nation-wide, electricity consumption at data centers alone could triple by 2030 to 390 TeraWatt Hours. Add in new electric vehicle battery factories, chip plants, and other clean tech manufacturing spurred by federal incentives, and demand over the next five years is forecast to rise at 1.5%—the fastest rate since the 1990s. Unable to keep pace, some utilities are scrambling to revise projections and reconsider previous plans of closing fossil fuel plants even as the Biden administration pushes for more renewable energy. Some older coal power plans will stay online, until the grid adds more power production capacity. The result could be increased emissions in the near term and risks of rolling blackouts if infrastructure continues lagging behind demand.
The situation is especially dire in Virginia, the world's largest data center hub. The state's largest utility, Dominion Energy, was forced to pause new data center connections for three months last year due to surging demand in Loudoun County. Though connections have resumed, Dominion expects load growth to almost double over the next 15 years. With data centers, EV factories, and other power-hungry tech continuing rapid expansion, experts warn the US national electricity grid is poorly equipped to handle the spike. Substantial investments in new transmission lines and generation are urgently needed to avoid businesses being turned away or blackouts in some regions. Though many tech companies aim to power operations with clean energy, factories are increasingly open to any available power source.
Source:
Bloomberg
The situation is especially dire in Virginia, the world's largest data center hub. The state's largest utility, Dominion Energy, was forced to pause new data center connections for three months last year due to surging demand in Loudoun County. Though connections have resumed, Dominion expects load growth to almost double over the next 15 years. With data centers, EV factories, and other power-hungry tech continuing rapid expansion, experts warn the US national electricity grid is poorly equipped to handle the spike. Substantial investments in new transmission lines and generation are urgently needed to avoid businesses being turned away or blackouts in some regions. Though many tech companies aim to power operations with clean energy, factories are increasingly open to any available power source.
35 Comments on AI Power Consumption Surge Strains US Electricity Grid, Coal-Powered Plants Make a Comeback
Imo the world need to build more nuclear, and i know how much of a enviromental hit they are to build, but once running they probably more than pay for themselves, and produce no enviromental impact.
Britain is pretty small, so with enough nuclear stations, Britain could have a 24/7 supply of clean power for the whole country with no need for any oil/coal or gas use at all.
No, more emissions due to poor products and bad planning is not "a plus." People going to die either way but at least this way if we spent money in the right way it's theoretically avoidable. Supplement them with nuclear/hydro for surges and you have a winner.
Every power source needs mining to create the buildings Infrastructure.
hydro is disastrous to the environment, it destroys habitat and causes irepreble damage to the rivers they are build on.
this wouldn’t have happened if there was any form of planning for the future and growth of demand for electrical power in the whole western world tHe past 30 years.
privatisation of the grid was dumb.
And countries wonder why they have power issues, if governments don't invest then expect issues.
So that's what the federal agencies are doing with their bloated budgets.