AI Data Centers Drive Utilities to Back Off Clean‑Energy Targets
An Associated Press report details how surging electricity demand from AI‑driven data centers is pushing major U.S. utilities to reconsider or weaken clean‑energy plans, with Nevada’s NV Energy warning it will need roughly three times the power required to run Las Vegas just to serve proposed data‑center projects and likely cannot do so without more fossil fuels, putting the state’s 50%‑renewables‑by‑2030 mandate at risk. In North Carolina, the largest utility is revising its long‑term plan by delaying coal‑plant retirements and planning additional natural‑gas capacity after legislators scrapped an interim emissions‑cut target, raising doubts about the state’s 2050 net‑zero goal. NextEra Energy, a major supplier of commercial power across more than a dozen states, has dropped its own 2045 zero‑emissions pledge, citing a near‑term 'demand for all forms of power generation' as data centers and new manufacturing soak up capacity. The Trump administration is actively encouraging states to lean on coal to meet this growth, while tech firms that once touted aggressive climate commitments are slowing or reshaping those pledges to keep up with AI demand. Environmental groups warn that data centers are becoming one of the largest emerging threats to U.S. climate targets, even as industry advocates note that the sector accounted for about half of all corporate clean‑energy purchases in 2024 but say renewable projects and grid upgrades are not coming online fast enough.
📌 Key Facts
- NV Energy says proposed data centers would require about three times the electricity currently needed to power Las Vegas, endangering Nevada’s 50%‑renewables‑by‑2030 target.
- North Carolina lawmakers removed an interim utility carbon‑reduction goal, and the state’s largest utility is now planning more gas plants and delaying coal retirements despite a 2050 net‑zero law.
- NextEra Energy has abandoned its 2045 zero‑emissions goal in a recent filing, citing growing demand for 'all forms of power generation' from data centers and other new loads.
📊 Relevant Data
Black households in the US spend 43% more of their income on energy costs compared to non-Hispanic White households, while Hispanic households spend 20% more.
National study finds energy bills hit minority households the hardest — Binghamton University
In the US, racial minorities, particularly Black and Hispanic households, bear a greater energy burden, with Black households facing an extra combined annual energy burden of $1.64 billion.
Racial disparities in the energy burden beyond socio-economic status — Energy Economics
Data centers in the US are often located in areas with higher pollution burdens and majority-minority communities, potentially increasing environmental and health impacts on these groups.
The Unequal Burden of Data Centers — Kapor Foundation
The rapid growth of AI data centers is contributing to increased electricity demands, which disproportionately affect low-income, Black, and Hispanic households through higher energy burdens.
Home electricity bills are skyrocketing. For data centers, not so much. — The Invading Sea
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