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AI’s Power Hunger Is Reshaping the Electric Grid and Pushing Up Bills

Jun 3, 2026·4 min read

By JBizNews Desk

June 3, 2026

America’s electricity system is being rebuilt around artificial intelligence, and the latest numbers show why.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration projects national electricity demand will reach record levels in 2026, climbing to roughly 4,250 billion kilowatt-hours, while the International Energy Agency expects global data-center power consumption to roughly double by 2030. Much of that growth is being driven by AI.

What was once a niche concern for utilities has become a national economic issue, reshaping where data centers are built, how they operate, and ultimately what households and businesses pay for electricity.

The reason is straightforward. The advanced chips used to train and operate AI systems consume far more electricity than previous generations of computing hardware. Packed into increasingly dense server farms and operating around the clock, these AI facilities are becoming some of the largest power consumers in the country.

According to the Electric Power Research Institute, data centers consumed approximately 26% of Virginia’s electricity in 2023. The organization projects that figure could rise to between 41% and 59% by 2030. Several other states, including Iowa, Nebraska, and Oregon, are expected to see data centers account for more than 20% of electricity demand.

The financial implications are staggering.

Goldman Sachs Research estimates global data-center electricity demand will increase 165% by 2030 compared with 2023 levels. Meanwhile, a study of 51 major U.S. utilities published by PowerLines found those companies now plan to spend at least $1.4 trillion through 2030 expanding and modernizing the grid, a figure more than 21% higher than utilities projected just one year ago.

Those investments ultimately find their way into electricity rates.

The growing strain is also forcing engineers to redesign how data centers are built. Operators are rethinking server density, cooling systems, backup power strategies, and electrical infrastructure as AI workloads continue expanding.

Technology companies are pursuing efficiency improvements as well. Nvidia’s latest chips deliver substantially more computing power per watt than previous generations. Yet demand continues growing faster than efficiency gains.

As Elon Musk remarked earlier this year, “Very soon, maybe even later this year, we’ll be producing more chips than we can turn on.”

Faced with grid limitations, many operators are no longer waiting for utilities to catch up.

Instead, they are building their own power supplies.

A growing number of large data centers are developing dedicated natural-gas plants, battery systems, and private energy infrastructure. Some are effectively creating what industry executives call “energy islands” that can operate independently of the public grid.

One example is a Meta campus near Columbus, Ohio, which received approval to operate using dedicated on-site natural-gas generation supplied by Williams Companies.

The shift reflects real infrastructure bottlenecks. Utilities face multi-year shortages of critical equipment such as transformers, while some grid-interconnection queues stretch so long that projects approved in 2025 had already been waiting nearly eight years.

Not everyone believes the demand surge will be as dramatic as projected.

The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) argues that data centers can often use existing grid capacity more efficiently by reducing consumption during peak-demand periods.

There are also signs the expansion may be occurring more slowly than some forecasts suggest. New data-center agreements reportedly fell more than 40% between the third and fourth quarters of 2025, only about one-third of announced projects are currently under construction, and reports indicate that OpenAI’s Stargate project in Texas has encountered delays.

Even so, the business effects are already visible.

Utilities are accelerating investments in generation capacity. Interest in both natural gas and nuclear power has surged. Manufacturers producing transformers, switchgear, and grid equipment face record backlogs. Chipmakers increasingly market energy efficiency as a competitive advantage.

The AI race is becoming less about access to capital and more about access to power.

For consumers, the impact is increasingly visible on monthly utility bills.

As companies and utilities invest hundreds of billions of dollars in transmission lines, substations, and power generation, regulators are wrestling with how much of those costs should be borne by households versus the technology companies driving the demand.

The bottom line is that the AI boom has quietly become an energy story.

The race to build smarter machines now runs directly through power plants, transmission lines, substations, and utility rate cases. How those challenges are resolved will shape not only the future of artificial intelligence, but also what Americans pay for electricity for years to come.

New York — JBizNews Desk

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