Utilities across the U.S. Southeast are claiming that a massive buildout of data centers and factories will force them to construct gigawatts of new fossil gas-fired power plants over the coming decade — a fleet large enough and dirty enough to potentially put U.S. climate goals out of reach.
However, critics of these plans say that utilities have cleaner and cheaper alternatives to reliably manage surging new power demand, and that state utility regulators in Georgia, the Carolinas and Tennessee need to require them to explore those options.
For the moment, though, these utilities, which serve tens of millions of customers, appear set on a fossil-fueled power expansion that also promises them additional profits for years to come — profits that environmentalists and consumer advocates argue will be reaped at the expense of the climate and their customers.
“The problem we face now is that everyone is searching for power,” said Simon Mahan, executive director of the Southern Renewable Energy Association. “Utilities across the Southeast are scrambling to find every last megawatt they can get…. They are trying desperately to get these new large-load customers, because they make more money when they sell more power.”
In some regions, these potential new customers are big data centers to serve the skyrocketing demand for enterprise computing power, artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency mining. In others, they’re factories for electric vehicles, lithium-ion batteries and solar panels supported by billions of dollars of federal incentives from the Inflation Reduction Act.
The exact figures vary from region to region, but most of the utilities are now forecasting high single-digit percentage growth rates every year through the end of the decade. Demand for electricity over the past decade and a half has stayed flat or even declined, so growth on that order would be a sea change for utilities.
Whether this new electricity demand will emerge at the speed and scale these utilities are predicting is unclear; utilities have overestimated demand growth before. Some critics have accused utilities of seizing on hype around the rapid expansion of energy-intensive artificial intelligence technology to win approval for gas plants that are not really necessary.
But even if these projections are accurate, critics say new fossil gas plants aren’t the answer. They argue that gas plants are polluting, unreliable and likely to become stranded assets in the near future, as climate imperatives and cheaper clean-energy resources force them to close before utilities have recouped their costs.
“Are we facing a ‘grid crisis’ in the U.S. due to data center and factory expansion? No,” Tyler Norris, former vice president of development at independent power producer Cypress Creek Renewables and now a doctoral student at Duke University, wrote in a recent social media post. “But doomsday thinking appears to be spreading and increasing the risk of poor decision-making.”
There are more reliable and cost-effective ways to deal with an increase in electricity demand that must be explored further, Norris and others point out, like building solar and wind power — paired with batteries — or enlisting power-hungry corporate customers to use less electricity when demand is at its highest. These options also help achieve climate goals, rather than threaten them.
Experts say the only way to course correct is for state utility commissions to intervene — something each one has an opportunity to do in the coming months.
What the utilities want — and what it would cost the climate
The Southeast utilities’ current plans, if approved, could have a disastrous climate impact.
These utilities are also planning to add gigawatts of solar power, batteries and other carbon-free resources and to close down gigawatts of coal-fired power plants. But taken together, the carbon impacts of a large gas expansion would eclipse the gains of these projects, according to an analysis from the Southern Environmental Law Center.
Last month, Georgia Power, a business unit of multi-state utility holding company Southern Company, secured a preliminary settlement plan with Georgia regulators that would allow the utility to fast-track 1,400 megawatts of new gas-fired power plants in the next three years. Georgia Power sought permission last year to rush the plan through regulatory approval to meet what it now forecasts will be 17 times more power demand growth than it had predicted it would need just 18 months earlier, due to new data centers and factories being planned in the state. The settlement plan still requires the vote of the Georgia Public Service Commission, expected to be held on April 16.
Duke Energy, one of the country’s biggest utilities with operations in six states, recently added significantly more fossil gas plants to its plan for supplying North Carolina and South Carolina, boosting its request to a total of 9,000 megawatts. That’s nearly three times the amount it requested to build in a 2022 proposal, and would delay its ability to meet a commitment under North Carolina law to cut its carbon emissions by 70 percent from 2005 levels by 2030. Duke says the buildout is needed to meet a forecasted 12-percent increase in electricity demand by 2038, driven largely by dozens of economic development projects in both states.
In South Carolina, state lawmakers are advancing legislation backed by utilities Dominion Energy and Santee Cooper to fast-track construction of a 2,000-megawatt fossil gas-fired power plant. The bill’s sponsor, Speaker of the House Murrell Smith (R), has cited a looming “crisis point” for the state’s grid as a result of rising demand from factories and growing population.
And Tennessee Valley Authority, the federal entity that generates power for 10 million people across seven Southeastern states, is developing a plan that could include 6,600 megawatts of new gas-fired power plants to replace coal plants and serve growing power demand. TVA delayed the release of its official plan last month, leaving uncertain just how much new gas-fired power it will propose.
“If all of these gas proposals across the Southeast do come to fruition, I think we’re going to have a huge confluence of issues between climate and reliability and affordability,” said Maggie Shober, research director of the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
What’s frustrating, Shober said, is that these utilities “were already proposing new gas before this load growth showed up. Duke and TVA have each flip-flopped on who has the largest gas buildout in the country, but they remain first and second by a pretty large margin.”
Gudrun Thompson, senior attorney and energy program leader at the Southern Environmental Law Center, agreed that “gas has been the answer to multiple problems” for Southeastern utilities.
“A couple of years ago it was the bridge fuel they needed to accommodate renewables. After Winter Storms Uri and Elliott” — major storms that led to catastrophic power outages in Texas and rolling blackouts in the Southeast, respectively — “it was what they needed for reliability. Now it’s what they need to meet data center load,” she said. “Whatever the problem is, it seems the reflexive solution is to build a new gas plant.”
The nonprofit environmental advocacy law firm estimates that utilities in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia are planning to retire about 25,000 megawatts of coal by 2038, while simultaneously rushing to build 33,000 megawatts of new gas plants over the next decade. At the same time, utilities across the country need to cut power-sector emissions