Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumOH Regulators Rule Data Centers Must Pay More Upfront Costs (And We'll See How Long This Stance Lasts . . . )
Energy regulators in Ohio said on Wednesday that electricity-hungry data centers must pay more up front for their power demands, overruling the objections of the tech companies that rely on them to develop artificial intelligence. The decision could set a precedent in other places grappling with soaring data center power demands, as summer temperatures climb and AIs appetite for energy has raised concerns about rising home electricity bills.
Surging power demand from data centers is on track to force utilities to make expensive grid upgrades in Ohio and other states. Major tech companies including Meta, Google, Microsoft and Amazon have data centers in Ohio. The tech giants supported a competing proposal that would have been more lenient on them but risked passing the increased costs on to consumers.
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The Ohio showdown over data centers impact on energy infrastructure started last year, when power company American Electric Power proposed increasing a monthly charge on data centers in the state from 60 percent of their projected consumption to 90 percent regardless of their actual usage. The power company said the increased charge was needed to help cover the cost of expensive transmission-line upgrades required to serve data center energy needs. AEP said demand from dozens of pending data center customers was set to more than triple its previous peak load.
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The Data Center Coalition said in a filing that the proposal unfairly targeted data centers and risked unduly stifling data center development in Ohio. We continue to maintain that no one customer type or industry should be singled out for disparate rate treatment by the utility, said the coalitions director of energy policy, Lucas Fykes, in an emailed statement. The industry is committed to paying its full cost of service, he added. Amazon derided the power companys proposal as a discriminatory and punitive approach in an April filing with the commission.
Ed. - Cry harder.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/07/10/ohio-data-centers-energy-costs/

dutch777
(4,631 posts)...by facility square footage compared with almost any other business operation, they are low job contributors. WA state, even before AI, saw the building of data centers happen rapidly in the eastern part of the state where there is lots of excess and therefore cheap hydroelectric power. The local school districts were panicked as they saw all this big construction and assumed there would be all these workers moving in with kids and a need for lots more classroom space. It didn't happen. First, there were just very few new jobs created. Plus, the tech types didn't find eastern WA state a very desirable place to live so kept their homes and families in the more culturally rich and green western side of the state and just spent a few nights in town when working.