The explosive growth of data centers could threaten the stability of the electrical grid this winter, according to an industry overseer. Across North America, demand for electricity this winter is expected to be 2.5% higher than last year for a total of 20 gigawatts, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) said in a report released this week. In recent years, winter demand grew by 1% or less. Data centers are driving a significant chunk of that growth, especially in the mid-Atlantic, U.S. West, and U.S. Southeast, āareas where a lot of data center development is occurring,ā Mark Olson, NERC manager of reliability assessments, told E&E News. The report specifically calls out data center expansion in Texas, saying that it is ācontributing to continued risk of supply shortfalls.ā That stat might be particularly worrisome to Texans, who nearly five years ago suffered through massive power outages during an intense cold snap. At the time, natural gas power plants tripped offline as wellheads froze, slashing the supply of natural gas. Meanwhile, demand for the fossil fuel soared as residential and commercial customers tried to keep homes and offices warm. (The governor publicly blamed wind turbines, despite knowing that they were only a small part of the problem.) This year, NERC said the situation in Texas isnāt likely to be as dire as it was in February 2021, in part because so many batteries have been added to the stateās grid. Those batteries can step in to provide electricity if gas-fired power plants canāt deliver as intended. Plus, they can react more quickly to smaller perturbations than so-called āpeakerā power plants, most of which run on natural gas and require minutes to spin up. Still, Texas isnāt entirely in the clear. Techcrunch event San Francisco | October 13-15, 2026 Most of the batteries deployed in Texas can deliver electricity for a few hours at a time. Thatās suitable in circumstances where demand tends to peak for a short time, li...
First seen: 2025-11-19 20:01
Last seen: 2025-11-20 16:05