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Duke Energy increases its five-year capital spending plan to $103 Billion as more US data centres sign up

Duke Energy announced on Tuesday that it had increased its five-year investment?plan for power infrastructure to $100 billion. This is an 18% increase from the previous?iteration. It has now become the largest capital spending plan?for any U.S. regulated utility.

U.S. energy companies are increasing their spending plans at record levels, as power demand forecasts in the United States rise after years of stagnation. The growth is driven by the proliferation and energy-intensive data centres of the tech industry. U.S. energy demand is expected to hit

Record highs

The U.S. Energy Information Administration has stated that the U.S. will reach a peak of 4.5 gigawatts by 2026. Duke said during its post-earnings call that it had signed agreements to supply electricity to 1.5 gigawatts worth of new data centres since the results for the third quarter were released. This brings the total number of contracts to power the server warehouses up to 4.5 gigawatts.

The company has said that it has a pipeline of?9 gigawatts worth of data center demand. One gigawatt can power 750,000 homes.

As utilities plan to increase spending on power plants and cables, as well as other electrical infrastructure, in order to meet the growing demand, customer concerns about increasing power bills are growing.

Duke said that it uses tax credits to reduce costs for customers.

Harry Sideris, Duke CEO, said that affordability is a concern for everyone. It's not only electricity prices on people's minds - housing, healthcare and food prices are also on their minds. It is a topic of conversation.

Duke Energy has 8.6 million electric utility customers in the Carolinas as well as Florida, Indiana Ohio and Kentucky. Duke Energy's natural gas utilities service 1.7 million customers across the Carolinas, Tennessee and Ohio.

Duke, which reported its fourth quarter 2025 earnings, expects an adjusted profit of $6.55-6.80 per share in 2026, up from $6.31 the previous year.

LSEG data shows that the midpoint of forecast was below Wall Street's expectations?of 6.70 per share.

Charlotte-based Charlotte North Carolina Company also reported an adjusted profit per share of $1.50 for the three-month period ended December 31. This beat estimates by one cent per share. Reporting by Tanay dhumal from Bengaluru, and Laila kearney from New York; editing by Maju Sam.

(source: Reuters)