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United States AI Power

Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon Fight Calls to Pay More for Electric Grid Updates (msn.com) 66

The Washingon Post reports that a regulatory dispute in Ohio may help answer a big question about America's power grid: who will pay for the huge upgrades needed to meet soaring energy demand "from the data centers powering the modern internet and artificial intelligence revolution?" Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta are fighting a proposal by an Ohio power company to significantly increase the upfront energy costs they'll pay for their data centers, a move the companies dubbed "unfair" and "discriminatory" in documents filed with Ohio's Public Utility Commission last month. American Electric Power Ohio said in filings that the tariff increase was needed to prevent new infrastructure costs from being passed on to other customers such as households and businesses if the tech industry should fail to follow through on its ambitious, energy-intensive plans. The case could set a national precedent that helps determine whether and how other states force tech firms to be accountable for the costs of their growing energy consumption... The energy demands of data centers have created similar concerns in other hot spots such as Northern Virginia, Atlanta and Maricopa County, Arizona, leaving experts concerned that the U.S. power grid may not be capable of dealing with the combined needs of the green energy transition and the computing boom that artificial intelligence companies say is coming...

Energy customers must sometimes make a monthly payment to a utility that is a percentage of the maximum amount of electricity they predict that they could need. In Ohio, data center companies had agreed to pay 60 percent of the projected amount. But in May, the power company proposed a new, 10-year fee structure raising the charges to 90 percent of the expected load, even if they don't end up using that much. The major tech companies — all of whom are increasing spending on data center infrastructure to compete in AI — strenuously opposed the proposed contract in documents filed last month... According to testimony from AEP Ohio Vice President Lisa Kelso, there are 50 pending requests from data center customers seeking electric service at more than 90 sites, a potential 30,000 megawatts of additional load — enough to power more than 20 million households. That additional demand would more than triple the utility's previous peak load in 2023, she said. Between 2020 and 2024, the data center energy load in central Ohio increased sixfold, from 100 to 600 megawatts, her testimony reads. By 2030, that amount will reach 5,000 megawatts, according to the utility's signed agreements, she testified...

Meeting that demand will require AEP Ohio to build new transmission lines, an expensive and time-consuming process... Chief among the power company's concerns, according to the documents, is what will happen if it invests billions of dollars into new grid infrastructure only for the data centers to leave for greener pastures, or for the AI bubble to burst and the facilities to need much less power than initially projected. If the power company spends big on new infrastructure but the power demand it was built to serve doesn't materialize, other customers — including business and residential payers — will be stuck with the bill, the utility said... AEP Ohio's testimony in the case also questions whether data centers bring as much to local communities as factories or other high-energy-load businesses. Since 2019, non-data center businesses have created approximately 25 jobs for every megawatt of power requested, while data centers have created less than one job per megawatt, according to Kelso's testimony.

The tech companies rejected this criticism, saying the number of jobs they create is not relevant to how much power they have a right to purchase, and highlighted their other contributions to local economies... Amazon said in filings that it pays fees as high as 75 percent of projected demand in some states but that Ohio's proposal to bill it 90 percent goes too far.

"Should the Ohio tariff be approved, Microsoft and Google both threatened in their testimony to leave Ohio." (Although at the same time, "pressure on the electric grid is mounting all over the country...")

And the article points out that on Thursday, "the White House announced measures intended to speed up data center construction for AI projects, including by accelerating permitting."

Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon Fight Calls to Pay More for Electric Grid Updates

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  • ...wonder when they will include all the EV makers...AND users....
    • You assume every household is charging their EV from flat to 90% every night.

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        We don't have to assume anything. Smart meters can figure this out. And given an approved EV charging rate, recover it from those responsible.

        • If you are a big part of the energy production, use, or transportation in this country, you will need to pay more for that energy infrastructure.

          Forcing everyone else - socializing your company's costs - to pay for your company to make more profits is not a viable economic plan.

      • Just the fact that they're regularly charging their EV at home adds to the demands of the electrical grid. I'd think it only fair that they help pay for whatever expansion the grid needs.
        • Re:Hmm.. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Bahbus ( 1180627 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @02:35PM (#64787583) Homepage

          Charging an EV at home is pretty insignificant compared to the data centers these companies run - especially AI datacenters. Home users pay for that extra electricity (unless you're stealing it from your neighbor or something). And it doesn't require the power company to put new infrastructure to your home.

          These data centers require more infrastructure. If the power company builds it, and these companies pull out, the power company is out all that money for infrastructure that is no longer needed or used. And it gets passed along to the rest of the customers.

          So, yeah, these companies absolutely should pay for 100% of the extra infrastructure and their expected energy uses upfront. They aren't important to the state's economy or bottom line. These companies are just all giant babies threatening to run away if they don't get their way. Let them run away.

          • And it doesn't require the power company to put new infrastructure to your home.

            No, but if large numbers of people buy EVs and start charging them at home, eventually the local power company will have to start building more capacity to accommodate them and when that happens, the EV's owners should bear at least some of that cost.
            • Great but home users charging EV dont disappear after 5 years because they get a better deal elsewhere, so they will pay for any required network upgrades.

            • by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

              That would still only require normal incremental upgrades. You'd have to swap something like over half the vehicles on the road to electric over a very short time. Like a few months. Those already paying the higher rates will still be the ones to mostly pay for the upgrades. It doesn't matter if it's because you have an EV or running a server farm.

            • EVs charged at home are usally charged at night, which is way off-peak hours where demand is already very low.

        • They don't use roof-mounted solar panels? That should work in summer, and there are far fewer air-conditioning units running in winter so the grid should have some spare capacity.

          In theory, if those companies say their power needs are going to be more than double the current peaks, those companies should have to pay for the massive upgrades which are going to be necessary.
          An alternative would be for them to build their own power stations next door, something which could only conceivably make sense if sever

          • residential roof-mounted solar panels only helps to charge your car if your car is home...
            Elseways you have to have not only the car, the panels but also a 60kWh battery bank that you'll dump into your car when you get home [but probably not until midnight].

      • Not a required assumption. Merely that a large percentage will do so the day before Mother's Day or before Thanksgiving, as they all need to go over the river and through the woods to grandmother's house.

        For better or for worse, capacity planning of networks such as this requires that you plan for peak usage. Yes, some demand shaping is doable, but the same night you have to charge your car you're also doing a load of laundry and baking the turkey or baked beans. AT&T [before the breakup, so actual AT

    • ROFL.. comparing a data centre to a home owner's consumption.
  • So ... (Score:2, Insightful)

    ... the idea is to charge certain customers a premium because their energy usage is double plus ungood?
    • If you want to connect to their power and they have to run a line out to your proprty they will charge you for it so, if a large company wants to draw more power than their grid can handle and they have to run a new line to achieve that there is no difference: in both cases you are charged the cost of connecting you to their grid.
  • by SlashTex ( 10502574 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @10:56AM (#64787353)

    In this specific case, I agree with the state -- to me it seems the risks of building energy systems for tech companies is inherently more risky than the risks of building out energy for say local houses/apartments. So the state needs to put on big boy pants, ask for higher rates and/or commitents and risk these tech companies leaving Ohio. Or risk screwing their residents.

    BTW, imo, there is no way that the feds can do as good a job with infrastructure as state(s) or regional energy agreements. Sure, states are run by the same greedy, mypoic political folks as DC, but if you really want to get boondogles have the feds try to run something because they don't worry as much about risks. Closer to the problem (and the people paying for it) is better.

    • by ThosLives ( 686517 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @11:11AM (#64787367) Journal

      Indeed this is not like general grid updates, where the average use is going up due to a large number of new houses or whatever, where each house is using a small portion of the total increase.

      This is a very small number of customers each consuming huge portions of the new demand; this highly localized demand probably should be funded more directly by those demanding it, rather than spread around to every consumer on the grid.

      Note that EV customers are "small" demand, and it is generally spread out over the grid, not concentrated, so the traditional pricing models work just fine there (to respond to a different poster above).

      • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @07:30PM (#64788001)

        Fast EV charging is a bit complicated; a 5MW demand for 6-10 parking spaces of real-estate isn't really what the grid planners had intended. It is about 50% of a 12-13.47kV or 20% of a 33-35kV circuit; most utilities try to plan distribution circuits with about 20% headroom for growth. Distribution is relatively easy to expand though.

        At the substation level a single charging station isn't a big deal, but 2-3 can add up quickly; the substations usually have less headroom, and upgrading them gets significantly more expensive.

        • Some of the charger companies are sticking a battery between the EV and the grid so the draw on the grid is a lot lower and it saves them money
    • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @12:13PM (#64787429)

      In this specific case, I agree with the state -- to me it seems the risks of building energy systems for tech companies is inherently more risky than the risks of building out energy for say local houses/apartments. So the state needs to put on big boy pants, ask for higher rates and/or commitents and risk these tech companies leaving Ohio. Or risk screwing their residents.

      BTW, imo, there is no way that the feds can do as good a job with infrastructure as state(s) or regional energy agreements. Sure, states are run by the same greedy, mypoic political folks as DC, but if you really want to get boondogles have the feds try to run something because they don't worry as much about risks. Closer to the problem (and the people paying for it) is better.

      Exactly. Data Centers use huge amounts of electricity, want it o be uninterruptible and build where land is cheap but the infrastructure isn't there to support their requirements. As the TFA points out, absent, or vent with, significant investments by the data centers in the infrastructure the ratepayers and utilities will be left holding the bag if they shutdown or leave. It's not unreasonable they pay the costs of building out the infrastructure.

    • When I was in college, I worked at a local utility one summer. Crap job, basically I went with another guy out to rural areas and measured how much wire and how many poles it would take to reach something off the main road and if it required a new xformer. If I remember right, the payback period set by the utility was 2 years. So if it cost them 5K to do the buildout, your monthly juice bill for the next 2 years was at least 5k/24 or around 210 a month even if you used no juice. So back then residential cus
    • It should be exclusively a PUC issue, although a federal guideline that local agencies can easily apply would save a lot of pain (and provide a shelter for the PUCs from lawsuits). The math on this stuff is very complicated. You need to weigh residential rates against job creation, as well as the incremental cost of demand, incremental cost of supply, redundancy and resiliency and timing.

    • In this specific case, I agree with the state -- to me it seems the risks of building energy systems for tech companies is inherently more risky than the risks of building out energy for say local houses/apartments.

      A bribe will change the State's attitude quite quickly. I am guessing the tech companies forgot about that part of it... or, they wanted to see if they could get their way for free first. Regardless, this is a non-issue. The tech companies will get their power and we will be fucked regarding maintenance.

  • Normally, grid costs are factored in as part of the electricity price. The utilities are selling lots of electricity, so they have LTS of money for the grid.

    Unless they negotiated a bad deal with these companies, there shouldn't be a problem. If they did, well, that was dumb. Regardless, I don't see why the politicians should be involved.

  • by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@NOspAm.tedata.net.eg> on Saturday September 14, 2024 @11:13AM (#64787371) Journal

    Experts [are] concerned that the U.S. power grid may not be capable of dealing with the combined needs of the green energy transition and the computing boom that artificial intelligence companies say is coming...

    These corporations are just giant black holes when it comes to money, power, and resources. They just keep demanding more and more, but all I ever see is it disappear into a black abyss.

    Fuck our corporate overlords. I vote for green energy transition. I hope others do too.

    • Experts [are] concerned that the U.S. power grid may not be capable of dealing with the...needs of the green energy transition

      To solve that problem, the government should require every EV to be equipped with energy storage! Wouldn't that be great? [slashdot.org]

      Sometimes I surprise even myself with such great ideas that nobody else ever thought of.

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @11:23AM (#64787381)
    Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon should finance their own electric grid upgrades respectively, considering their history of renegging on agreements, the high tech industry is notorious for betrayal of business partners
  • What are energy rates for? It's up to the energy company to be competent enough to find its own infrastructure.

    • What are energy rates for? It's up to the energy company to be competent enough to find its own infrastructure.

      They are capable of funding it, by charging the user the costs in the rate structure; which is what the data center don't like, they want the ratepayers to subsidize their infrastructure needs. It's probably in Ohio's long term interest they make good on their promise to leave if the PUC approves the plan; and as more states see the long term impact on prices for consumers and other businesses data centers may wind up paying their fair share everywhere.

      • Re:They will pay (Score:4, Insightful)

        by PPH ( 736903 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @01:30PM (#64787513)

        they want the ratepayers to subsidize their infrastructure needs

        Data centers are ratepayers too. It's up to the states' PUCs to approve rate structures which fund system infrastructure expansion. Generally, these rates are based on the peak power demands of each customer (or class of customers in the case of smaller users like residential).

        The primary problem is that much of this infrastructure work needs to be done up front to serve loads like data centers. And the recovery through billing works over longer periods of time. This puts utilities in the position of having to borrow a lot of money up front, increasing their interest expenses. Which is spread across all rate payers. So, you'll be seeing charges for this added to your residential bill. Utilities just want to place a bigger chunk of these expenses on the customers that are responsible for them. The data centers. Or have some other system of having the DCs assist in funding this work. The DC operators don't like this.

        Welcome to the tragedy of the commons.

        • Re:They will pay (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @01:43PM (#64787535)

          they want the ratepayers to subsidize their infrastructure needs

          Data centers are ratepayers too. It's up to the states' PUCs to approve rate structures which fund system infrastructure expansion. Generally, these rates are based on the peak power demands of each customer (or class of customers in the case of smaller users like residential).

          For sure, and since data centers often want gigawatts of power and the lines to supply it, it's not unreasonable for them to cover the costs. The issue, as I see it, is they want the power but for the costs to be borne by the rest of the ratepayers. You want up to a GigWatt of uninterruptible power, here's teh costs for power and T&D.

          The primary problem is that much of this infrastructure work needs to be done up front to serve loads like data centers. And the recovery through billing works over longer periods of time. This puts utilities in the position of having to borrow a lot of money up front, increasing their interest expenses. Which is spread across all rate payers. So, you'll be seeing charges for this added to your residential bill. Utilities just want to place a bigger chunk of these expenses on the customers that are responsible for them. The data centers. Or have some other system of having the DCs assist in funding this work. The DC operators don't like this.

          Welcome to the tragedy of the commons.

          Unfortunately, states have fallen for the "we'll bring in lots of jobs" BS for years and gave companies sweetheart deals and the data centers want the same love. If enough states said pay up or FO, they'd likely pay up rather than not build.

        • Re: They will pay (Score:4, Insightful)

          by jabuzz ( 182671 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @05:37PM (#64787821) Homepage

          It's more the data centres bugger off say 5 years which means everyone else is paying for those electricity upgrades because they factor in a much longer period for amortization of the upgrade.

  • In case anyone wants to read the article from the original source:

    https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

  • by doubledown00 ( 2767069 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @12:22PM (#64787435)

    "According to testimony from AEP Ohio Vice President Lisa Kelso, there are 50 pending requests from data center customers seeking electric service at more than 90 sites, a potential 30,000 megawatts of additional load — enough to power more than 20 million households."

    If the board has that many big companies making requests, then rest assured that they have calculated the arbitrage and chosen this particular location and utility because they are hugely cheaper than anywhere else.

    100 percent I hope the utility goes through with this. Send a message to these corporate fucks.

  • I'm curious what the answer to this would be in an ideal socialist society. Or is it just irrelevant because there is only one entity (everybody) who pays for everything?
    • Not particularly versed in socialist policy, but I would surmise it would go to a state vote (like for a bond), with some automatic contract provisions (like companies putting 50% of the projected costs in escrow) should the companies leave the utilities high and dry.

      Come to think of it, I haven't seen much of socialist thought/dialogue on the major factor of production- land.

    • I'm curious what the answer to this would be in an ideal socialist society. Or is it just irrelevant because there is only one entity (everybody) who pays for everything?

      Since socialism is essentially socialised ownership of means of production and/or distribution, socialized electric utilities already exist. They are called cooperatives. https://www.wrec.coop/co-op-10... [wrec.coop]

  • by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Saturday September 14, 2024 @01:03PM (#64787481)

    The city of Santa Clara in the middle of Silicon Valley is a case study [svvoice.com] in how businesses, and particularly large businesses, are subsidized by households. Households only consume 5.7% [siliconvalleypower.com] of the city-owned utility's electricity. However, households not only pay a higher rate ($0.166/kWh household vs. $0.146/kWh commercial/industrial), for using more electricity, households pay a higher rate while businesses pay a lower rate. And not only that, there is a program where business can get a 12% discount [siliconvalleypower.com] simply for pleading hardship. And that's not all. The rates have been increasing every year. Why? Because expansion is needed, not for households, but to support businesses.

    • I assume that situation is to attract or keep business customers. If it increases the local tax base, and/or adds local jobs... I can see some logic there for the people making the decisions (guessing from outside the electric utility).

      But with big 'compute boxes for the internet' I don't see those as true. And honestly businesses have tricks to shift 'profit' where they like, so maybe my thinking should be limited to physical on site jobs as the benefit.

      If I was running data centers I'd try to automate

    • I think worse, the commercial customers often get better reliability of the juice at the lower price. Residential is often seen as "optional" to power by the utilities as we residents don't have a contract for guaranteed power with penalty clauses.
    • On the other hand, Santa Clara's power costs less than half of what PG&E customers pay [pge.com] in the surrounding cities. They're doing something right, even if you disagree with subsidizing local businesses.

  • More taxpayer money, so that they can make even more profits, that is. How repulsive.

  • Should a person with a family passenger car pay the exact same road tax as a company with an 18 wheeler transporting heavy construction equipment?

    Hint: one puts a whole lot more wear and tear on the infrastructure then the other one does.

    Observation: large scale industrial users of electricity always pay far less then individuals for energy.

    Conclusion: the large scale industrial consumers are parasites on the backs of the vast majority of users.

    Before you go whining about electricity being different the

  • Why do you want to charge someone more based on how many electrons they use and why?

The next person to mention spaghetti stacks to me is going to have his head knocked off. -- Bill Conrad

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