Trump Urges Grid Operator to Make Tech Giants Fund New Power Plants

President Donald Trump will push the nation’s largest electricity grid operator Friday to require technology companies to pay for $15 billion in new power plants, though the proposal carries no legal force and depends on voluntary cooperation from an independent organization that was not invited to the announcement.

The administration will push PJM Interconnection, which manages electricity distribution for 67 million Americans across a 13-state region, to hold a procurement process where tech firms compete for contracts spanning 15 years. The arrangement could finance roughly $15 billion worth of generation facilities, with participating companies obligated to cover costs whether they consume the power or not.

Trump’s National Energy Dominance Council will join governors from Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia, and additional states in signing a joint declaration of intent. The document carries no binding legal force, though the administration wants PJM to complete the procurement by September’s end.

The president has made utility costs a recurring theme in recent statements. In a Truth Social post this week, he declared that Americans should not face increased electric bills to support data center operations, arguing that corporations constructing such facilities bear responsibility for associated infrastructure expenses.

With congressional midterms eight months away, energy prices have emerged as a political liability. Home electricity costs hit 18.07 cents per kilowatt-hour last September, climbing 7.4% year-over-year to set a new record, US Energy Information Administration data shows.

PJM manages transmission networks spanning Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and the nation’s capital. Northern Virginia alone contains the planet’s densest cluster of data facilities. Grid operators project demand will swell 17 percent before the decade closes.

Current auctions lock in supplies for single-year periods. The new structure extends commitments across 15 years, obligating tech companies to fund capacity regardless of consumption patterns. Supporters argue that this guaranteed revenue stream will attract power plant investors despite market volatility.

PJM’s December capacity auction failed to secure enough electricity to meet projected demand, falling 6.6 gigawatts short. The grid operator blamed the gap on surging data center construction. The shortfall raised immediate concerns about blackouts and further price spikes.

White House representatives have briefed PJM leadership, state authorities, utility executives, generation developers, and hyperscale operators on the framework. Despite these conversations, PJM will not attend Friday’s rollout and has issued no public commitment to proceed with the auction.

The administration wants PJM to maintain current price limitations through year’s end. Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro negotiated cost caps with the grid operator last year, yet subsequent auctions still produced record-high clearing prices.

Natural gas plants stand to benefit most from accelerated construction, though nuclear projects could also gain traction. Market observers note that deep-pocketed technology giants hold advantages over smaller AI infrastructure companies lacking comparable financial reserves.



Information for this story was found via Bloomberg, and the sources and companies mentioned. The author has no securities or affiliations related to the organizations discussed. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.

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