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Talen takes FERC to court for rejecting Amazon's co-located data centers

Talen Energy has asked a U.S. court of appeals to review a federal regulator's decision last year to reject an Amazon power agreement that would have connected the data center directly to Talen’s Pennsylvania nuclear facility. According to court documents filed this week, Talen Energy wants to know what the court thinks about the decision.

Co-location, also known as colocation, is a popular option for industries that need to obtain large amounts of electricity quickly.

Talen sold Amazon its data center campus located at the Susquehanna Nuclear Generating Facility in early last year. The deal would allow the center eventually to receive almost 1 gigawatts of electricity. This is about enough to power the entire Philadelphia area.

Talen was denied an amended interconnection contract by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in December, which would have permitted it to increase its electricity supply to the data centre.

There are many ways to co-locate your energy supply. The Talen deal, however, would redirect electricity away from the regional grid. FERC warned that this could worsen the imbalance between the demand and supply of certain parts of the electric system in the United States.

Talen has now filed a petition for a review of FERC’s rejection. This includes a rejected rehearing application, by the United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.

If the court decides to review the request, the court's decision could be overturned by FERC or sent back to regulators for review. The court could also uphold the regulator's decisions. (Reporting and editing by Chris Reese; Laila Kearney)

(source: Reuters)