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White House wants to auction off the largest US electric grid in an emergency

The White House on Saturday urged the U.S. largest electric grid to hold an "emergency auction" to prevent rolling blackouts, as data center energy demands are growing faster than the country's ability to build new generation plants.

The Trump Administration initiative calls for PJM Interconnection, a company that serves 67,000,000 customers across 13 states, including Washington, D.C., and conducts an emergency auction to address escalating prices of electricity and increasing reliability risks in the mid-Atlantic area of the United States.

PJM will unveil its plan on Friday.

PJM has been criticized for its slow response to the rising demand and the rotating blackouts. The rapid expansion of data centres to power artificial intelligence and other things has strained the resources of PJM, as well as other regional U.S. electrical grids. Donald Trump wants to fight consumer price inflation, which could undermine Republican support ahead of the November midterm elections.

The White House wants to cap the amount that existing power plants are allowed to charge on the PJM market. Recent PJM auctions set record prices for power generators, which were 800% higher than last year. This increased electricity prices in homes and businesses.

Data centers would be required to pay for new power generation, whether or not they use it. This agreement would require them to purchase existing power rather than buy up the new power. BYOG is the concept, which stands for "bring you own generation."

PJM stated that it is reviewing principles laid out by the White House, governors and other government agencies. A PJM spokesperson confirmed that PJM had not been invited to the event.

PJM forecasts that summer peak grid usage will increase by 70 gigawatts, to 220 gigawatts in the next 15 year. ?PJM's record summer peak was 165 gigawatts.

PJM has said that it has handled more than 170 Gigawatts in new generation requests since 2023. PJM has completed the study of nearly 60 gigawatts and signed or offered generation interconnection agreements to projects.

BACKLASH RESULTS FROM RISING POWER BILLS

PJM's rising power bills have sparked a political backlash in the past year, and some governors have threatened to abandon the grid. Nine state governors sent an open letter last summer to the PJM Board of Managers criticizing the grid operators for failing to do enough to combat an escalating crisis in electricity affordability.

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro told the White House on Friday that PJM had been "too damn slow" to allow new generation onto their grid, at a time when energy demand was increasing.

Burgum said PJM was lucky to have avoided widespread blackouts so far. Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Tim McLaughlin and Timothy Gardner from Philadelphia; editing by Liz Hampton and Matthew Lewis

(source: Reuters)