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CenterPoint increases its spending plan due to a surge in power demand for data centers

CenterPoint increases its spending plan due to a surge in power demand for data centers

CenterPoint Energy, a U.S. utility company, added $500 million on Thursday to its 10-year plan of capital expenditures to improve its electricity grid in order to meet the surge in demand for energy from new data centres.

According to a report by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, the power demand of U.S. data centres is expected to triple over the next three to four years. This could consume up to 12% the total amount of electricity produced.

CenterPoint anticipates that demand in Houston will increase by nearly 50% between 2031 and 2030. On Thursday, it increased its capital budget through 2030 from $47.5 billion to $47.5 Billion to improve grid reliability.

CenterPoint's CFO Christopher Foster stated in a recent conference call that "we, like our peers, have seen an unprecedented interest in connecting to the grid. We have received around 40 gigawatts of load interconnection requests."

Dominion Energy Duke Energy DTE Energy have also increased their capital spending plans in the past month to meet the increasing power demand of data centers.

Utilities ranked among the top winners of the S&P 500 in 2008, thanks to the expectation that data centers would increase their demand. The S&P Index tracking utilities is expected to rise 19.6% by 2024.

CenterPoint also confirmed its profit forecast for 2025 between $1.74 to $1.76 per common share, after matching Wall Street's expectations of a fourth-quarter adjusted earning per share of 40 cents.

The company's net quarterly income increased to $248 millions, or 38 cents a share, up from $192million, or 30cents a share, one year ago. (Reporting and editing by Leroy Leo in Bengaluru, Sriraj Kalluvila).

(source: Reuters)