Data centers threaten clean energy goals as electricity demand for AI surges nationwide

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Nevada's largest utility needs three times the electricity required to power Las Vegas just to handle proposed data centers—and it probably can't do that without fossil fuels. This threatens the state's clean energy targets requiring 50% renewable power by 2030. Utilities across the country face similar challenges as the exploding demand for powering artificial intelligence clashes with long-term plans to move away from fossil fuels.

Data Centers Drive Unprecedented Electricity Demand

Nevada's largest utility, NV Energy, faces an extraordinary challenge: it will need three times the electricity required to power Las Vegas just to handle proposed data centers

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. The utility, which provides electricity to 90% of the state, admits it probably can't meet this demand without fossil fuels, putting Nevada's clean energy goals requiring 50% renewable power by 2030 at serious risk

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. "I can't remember a time in the history of the industry where we've seen as much interest in adding load, which is primarily driven by data centers," said Shawn Elicegui, senior vice president of regulatory and resource planning for NV Energy

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This unprecedented load addition represents more than just a local issue. Utilities across the country are grappling with how to meet the exploding electricity demand for data centers to power artificial intelligence without sacrificing long-term plans to move away from fossil fuels in favor of renewable and zero-carbon sources

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States Abandon Renewable Energy Targets Amid Surging Demand for Data Centers

The crisis extends far beyond Nevada. In North Carolina, which is also seeing a surge of data centers, the largest utility is revising its long-term plans to delay the retirement of coal plants and to build more natural gas plants

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. Legislators removed an interim goal for utilities to cut carbon emissions, spurring concern from environmentalists that the state might miss its goal of zero carbon emissions by 2050

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. Even more dramatically, NextEra Energy, which serves commercial electricity in over a dozen states, completely dropped its goal to reach zero emissions by 2045 due to the "demand for all forms of power generation," the company said in a recent business filing

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These delayed coal plant retirements and abandoned targets signal a fundamental shift in energy planning. The Trump administration has encouraged states to use coal to meet the demands from manufacturing and data centers, while tech companies are also slowing down on their own climate goals to meet the consumer demands for artificial intelligence

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. "It's very alarming, and it's probably the single largest natural resource issue of our time," said Olivia Tanager, director of the Sierra Club's Toiyabe chapter covering Nevada

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Reliance on Fossil Fuels Intensifies as Power Grid Struggles

Nevada is one of the fastest-growing data center markets in the U.S. thanks to its lack of a corporate income tax, cheap land and tax breaks for data centers

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. There are dozens already with more on the way. While some data centers say they want to be part of the solution—the industry was responsible for half of all corporate clean energy procurement in 2024, said Dan Diorio, vice president of state policy for the Data Center Coalition—renewable energy's contribution to the power grid is not growing fast enough

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Nationally, orders for gas turbines are backlogged and processing renewable energy projects take time, industry experts say

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. Many other utilities and tech companies are turning to gas-fired generation to power data centers, including the controversial xAI data center near Memphis that is using mobile gas turbines strapped to semitrucks

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Environmental and Community Concerns Mount

Beyond carbon emissions, communities face immediate impacts. Tanager, of the Sierra Club, said multiple proposed data centers in Northern Nevada would use hundreds of low-quality diesel-powered backup generators that will worsen air quality

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. At a recent seven-hour legislative meeting, Nevadans complained to lawmakers about the noise data centers produce, and their worries about how the centers will affect water supply and energy bills

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. Residents of Boulder City, home of the Hoover Dam, are also opposing a proposed center for similar concerns

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Now lawmakers are eyeing more regulations and debating how to balance both the state's clean energy goals with the economic benefits data centers bring

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. NV Energy requires data center developers to agree to fund their own infrastructure and energy needs—but it doesn't have to be renewable

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Switch Data Center Shows Alternative Path

South of the Las Vegas Strip, the Switch data center stretches for nearly a square mile. It's the largest data center in Southern Nevada, and it runs entirely on renewable energy, according to Jason Hoffman, chief strategy officer

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Source: AP

Source: AP

Unlike other data centers, Switch is licensed to build its own sources of renewable energy at the scale of a utility company. It has built 1 gigawatt of solar energy and is in the process of building more solar fields

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. During the summer heat, when more energy is required to keep the equipment cool, Switch can remove itself from the grid and be self-sufficient

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. Nevada designed a volunteer funding model that allows companies to put up money for NV Energy's clean energy development then count it toward their corporate energy goals, the first such model of its kind in the country

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