US Governors and Trump Administration Push for Emergency Power Auction to Build New Power Plants
The US government, led by the Trump administration and a bipartisan group of governors, is urging the PJM Interconnection, the country's largest electricity market, to hold an "emergency" power auction. The move aims to spur a massive buildout of new power plants, which would allegedly guarantee revenue for companies investing in new infrastructure.
The proposed 15-year contracts are unusually long and aim to discourage speculative requests to connect to the grid by data center developers who have been accused of driving up electricity rates. According to the Department of Energy, data centers should "pay more for new generation than residential customers" unless they bring their own power plants online or agree to curtail their energy use during supply crunches.
The auction could lead to $15 billion in new power generation and would help alleviate pressure on power grids as electricity demand from artificial intelligence (AI) continues to grow. However, the move has also been criticized for targeting data center developers who have become increasingly unpopular among Americans due to rising electricity rates.
Notably, neither the White House nor governors can mandate the auction, although a bipartisan group of governors signed onto a statement urging PJM to hold the auction. Bloomberg reports that PJM was not invited to the announcement made today.
This push comes as lawmakers and tech companies building out new data centers face growing fury from Americans over rising electricity rates. While the Trump administration has pushed for a resurgence of coal, gas, and nuclear power plants in the US, it has simultaneously worked to stymie the buildout of wind and solar farms that had become the fastest-growing sources of new electricity in recent years.
A successful auction could help shift the country's energy mix away from data centers and towards more sustainable forms of energy. However, the proposal faces resistance from data center developers who argue that they are simply trying to meet growing demand for their services.
As the debate over power generation and energy policy continues, one thing is clear: the future of US energy infrastructure hangs in the balance, and stakeholders on all sides must work together to find solutions that benefit the country as a whole.
The US government, led by the Trump administration and a bipartisan group of governors, is urging the PJM Interconnection, the country's largest electricity market, to hold an "emergency" power auction. The move aims to spur a massive buildout of new power plants, which would allegedly guarantee revenue for companies investing in new infrastructure.
The proposed 15-year contracts are unusually long and aim to discourage speculative requests to connect to the grid by data center developers who have been accused of driving up electricity rates. According to the Department of Energy, data centers should "pay more for new generation than residential customers" unless they bring their own power plants online or agree to curtail their energy use during supply crunches.
The auction could lead to $15 billion in new power generation and would help alleviate pressure on power grids as electricity demand from artificial intelligence (AI) continues to grow. However, the move has also been criticized for targeting data center developers who have become increasingly unpopular among Americans due to rising electricity rates.
Notably, neither the White House nor governors can mandate the auction, although a bipartisan group of governors signed onto a statement urging PJM to hold the auction. Bloomberg reports that PJM was not invited to the announcement made today.
This push comes as lawmakers and tech companies building out new data centers face growing fury from Americans over rising electricity rates. While the Trump administration has pushed for a resurgence of coal, gas, and nuclear power plants in the US, it has simultaneously worked to stymie the buildout of wind and solar farms that had become the fastest-growing sources of new electricity in recent years.
A successful auction could help shift the country's energy mix away from data centers and towards more sustainable forms of energy. However, the proposal faces resistance from data center developers who argue that they are simply trying to meet growing demand for their services.
As the debate over power generation and energy policy continues, one thing is clear: the future of US energy infrastructure hangs in the balance, and stakeholders on all sides must work together to find solutions that benefit the country as a whole.