Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumEnvironment Energy demand from data centers growing faster than West can supply, experts say
Data centers being rapidly built in the West are becoming an emerging risk to electrical grid reliability in the region, according to regional transmission experts.
New data centers, which can be built in as little as 18 months, are far outpacing the growth in new electrical energy supply and transmission, according to members of the Western Electricity Coordinating Council, a nonprofit organization based in Salt Lake City that ensures grid connection and reliability between utilities in 14 western states and parts of Canada and Mexico. Members of the council discussed challenges to grid reliability at a recent webinar first reported by the trade publication RTO Insider.
In it, council members said new energy demand from data centers has emerged as a more prescient challenge than meeting energy demand for transportation, also becoming rapidly electrified. The energy and transmission buildout needed to meet these demands is lagging, they said. By the end of 2023, just about half of the new energy buildout anticipated for the West had been completed. This is due in large part to supply chain issues, prices and skilled labor shortages, according to Branden Sudduth, the commissions vice president of reliability planning.
There are more than 700 data centers within those 14 states, including 109 in Oregon, according to the company Data Center Map, and there are more than 5,000 data centers throughout the U.S. according to Statista the most for any single country in the world.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2024/08/26/energy-demand-from-data-centers-growing-faster-than-west-can-supply-experts-say/
eppur_se_muova
(37,347 posts)progree
(11,463 posts). . . The Portland-based industry trade group Pacific Northwest Utilities Conference Committee has projected electricity demand to grow 30% in the region in the next decade, also due in large part to data centers.
This is quite a shock (no pun intended) to the system, where electricity demand (overall in the U.S.) has increased at an annualized average rate of only 0.22%/year from 2010 through 2022 (https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143289137#post3). And yet even with this very low growth rate, we read countless articles about grid deterioration and curtailments of wind and solar due to lack of adequate transmission.
A 17% increase projected by the WECC in their area from 2023 to 2033 annualizes to a 1.6%/year increase.
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Why your air conditioning bill is about to soar:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143270706#post21