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Dominance in contract negotiations for 47 gigawatts new data centers is up 17% year-on-year

Dominion Energy is the U.S. utility that powers "data center alley", in Northern Virginia. It said Tuesday that it was at some stage in contracting for data centers to have 47 gigawatts, which is more than Virginia needs.

As artificial intelligence and cloud computing have grown, so has the number of data centers that consume a lot of power. This is driving up U.S. electricity demand to new records.

Dominion, the largest electric utility in the world that serves data centers, has connected about 450 of them in Virginia's data center crossroads.

Data center pipeline has grown by 17% in the last year.

Dominion's CEO Robert Blue told investors on a conference call that "we continue to see robust data center demand." He was referring to earlier speculation about the Virginia data centre market being oversaturated.

Dominion is investing $50 billion in its capital investment plan for 2025-2029 to expand its power infrastructure.

Blue, who was on the call to discuss the company's third-quarter results, said: "We are developing resources across transmission, distribution and generation in order to meet this critical requirement on a timely manner."

Dominion exceeded its quarterly profit expectations, thanks to increased demand for power in its Virginian and South Carolina segments.

The adjusted operating earnings of Dominion's Virginia division rose by 2.5% in the third quarter to $679 millions, while those from South Carolina rose by over 14% to $109 million.

Revenue for the quarter was $4.53 Billion, up from $3.94 Billion a year earlier.

The company's interest costs rose by over 30%, to $527 millions in the third quarter. Dominion has narrowed the range for its operating earnings forecasts to $3.33 to $3.48 a share. This is down from the previous range of $3.28 to $3.52 a share. The company expects to achieve results at or above this midpoint if the weather conditions remain normal throughout the remainder of the year. According to LSEG, the utility's adjusted operating earnings for the three-month period ended September 30 were $1.06 per common share. This compares with an average analyst estimate of 95c per share. Sumit Saha reported from Bengaluru, Sahal Muhammed edited the story and David Gregorio provided translations.

(source: Reuters)