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AEP doubles its data center electricity demand and expands their spending plan

Executives with American Electric Power said on Thursday that the company's five-year capital expenditure plan will exceed $72 billion, as it doubles the number of power contracts signed with data centers.

U.S. electric demand is increasing at an unprecedented rate. Utilities are investing more to meet the growing demand from Big Tech, as they build data centers for complex AI-related tasks.

AEP claims that 80% of AEP's growth is driven by hyperscalers such as?Alphabet’s Google, Amazon.com, and Meta.

AEP shares reached a new record high, and last traded at $127.38 per share.

AEP has now signed agreements for 56 gigawatts of power to be supplied to data centers. This is a double since October. Data centers have requested an additional 180 gigawatts.

This combined capacity can power all the homes in the United States.

The company has said that as demand increases, it will be investing an additional $5 billion to $8 million in transmission and generation projects over its current capital investment plan of $72 billion.

As utilities increase spending on power plants and cables to meet the rising demand for electricity, customers are becoming more concerned about their rising power bills.

Bill Fehrman, AEP's CEO, said: "Through federal loan programs, state grants, innovative rates designs, and direct bill assistance we work to limit the bill impact while continuing to invest into the system."

Fehrman stated that while this is a good step forward, more measures are needed to ensure that the infrastructure required to service large loads is funded by customers who have these needs.

AEP stated that it would partner with ERCOT in Texas, an independent system owner, to build the necessary transmission infrastructure. It also said they would "bring large loads online quickly and within the regulatory framework".

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the Ohio-based company reported a?operating profit of $1.19 for the 'three months ended December 31. This was compared with an average analyst estimate of $1.15. Reporting by Vallari Shrivastava from Bengaluru, and Laila Kearney in New York, with editing by Tasim Zaid, Saumyadeb Chkrabarty and Philipp Fletcher.

(source: Reuters)