Big Tech wants to plug data centers into power plants. Utilities say it is not fair

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Harrisburg, Pa. An electric grid that serves everyone.

It’s raising questions about whether shifting power to high-paying customers will be enough for others, and whether it’s worth keeping large power users from paying for the grid. Federal regulators are trying to figure out what to do about this and quickly.

Front and center is the data center Amazon Web Services, Amazon’s cloud computing subsidiary, is building near the Susquehanna Nuclear Plant in eastern Pennsylvania.

The arrangement between the plant owners and AWS — the so-called “behind the meter” relationship — is the first to come before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. For now, FERC has ultimately rejected a deal that would have sent 960 megawatts — about 40% of the plant’s capacity — to the data center. This is enough to power over half a million homes.

That leaves the deal and others that may follow in limbo. It’s unclear when FERC, which blocked the deal on procedural grounds, will reopen the case, or how a change in presidential administrations will affect things.

“Companies are very upset because they now have a huge business opportunity,” said Bill Green, director of MIT’s Energy Initiative. “And if you’re five years late in the queue, for example — I don’t know if it’s going to be five years, but any number of years — you could miss the business opportunity entirely.”

What is driving the demand for energy-hungry data centers?

The rapid development of cloud computing and Artificial intelligence This has led to increased demand for data centers that require power to run servers, storage systems, network equipment and cooling systems.

That’s a spurred idea to retire nuclear power plants, develop smaller modular nuclear power plants and build utility-scale renewable installations or new natural gas plants. In December, California-based Okello announced a deal to provide 12 gigawatts to a data center developer.

Federal officials say the rapid development of data centers is important for the economy and national security, including to compete with China in artificial intelligence.

For AWS, the deal with Susquehanna fulfills its need for reliable power that meets its domestic needs without emitting planet-warming greenhouse gases like coal, oil or gas-fired plants.