Energy Gang

Data centers are adding an extra 220 gigawatts of electricity demand in the US. How can the grid cope? A second special episode from the ACORE Policy Forum

7 snips
Feb 27, 2026
Ray Long, ACORE CEO, on policy hurdles slowing energy infrastructure. Arthur Haubenstock, senior counsel at Equinix, on data center reliability, backup limits, and local grid impacts. Anna Shpitsberg, Wood Mackenzie power head, with data-driven forecasts of a 183–220 GW data center surge and its supply implications. They discuss supply sources, timing bottlenecks, and permitting, trade, and regulatory roadblocks.
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INSIGHT

Supply Mix Can Meet Much But Timing Creates Gaps

  • Multiple supply sources could meet increased data center load: ramping underutilized thermal plants (~47 GW), new gas builds, and renewables plus storage timed correctly.
  • Retirements (~60 GW) and low utilization of older plants leave a residual gap that renewables/storage must fill if timed and accredited right.
ADVICE

Reduce Costs By Fixing Supply Chains And Workforce

  • Address rising component and equipment costs, workforce shortages, and trade/tariff impacts to avoid pricing projects out of reach.
  • Build supply chain resilience, selectively onshore manufacturing, and strategic partnerships to lower capex and delivery times.
ADVICE

Keep Data Centers On The Grid And Reserve Backup For Emergencies

  • Prioritize a reliable, low-cost grid for data centers because they require five-nines uptime and low latency for services like financial transactions and AI inference.
  • Avoid using backup generation or storage for routine grid support since those assets must remain reserved for true emergencies.
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