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White House rallies utilities and data centers to AI power costs

Three people with knowledge of the plan say that 'the White House intends to gather utility companies and developers for a voluntary commitment designed to ensure that rapid growth in demand for electricity from artificial intelligence doesn't drive up bills for homes and businesses.

In the next few weeks, an event will be held to announce this initiative. Several companies are expected to participate and pledge to protect existing ratepayers from having to shoulder all of the costs associated with AI expansion. Sources said that the guest list was still being finalized.

The White House did not respond when contacted for comment.

The soaring demand for power from data centers in many states has led regulators, consumer groups and lawmakers to warn that consumers could be forced to subsidise grid upgrades to service some of the largest technology companies. This raises questions about whether the pledge is going to deliver on concrete commitments or just remain symbolic.

The Trump administration hopes to avoid political backlash due to rising electricity costs as it pushes for the expansion of AI infrastructure.

Amazon, Google Meta, Microsoft OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI all signed a "Ratepayer Protect Pledge" earlier this year at a White House event, committing themselves to pay for the electricity infrastructure required to support their AI projects, rather than pass those costs onto existing utility customers.

The companies have agreed to help pay for grid upgrades, new power generation and other costs associated with their data centers. This includes unused reserved capacity. The White House stated that the commitments are designed to stop 'households subsidizing AI infrastructure growth.

People familiar with the plans say that the new event will broaden the?commitments by bringing together electric utilities, companies who build and operate datacenters on behalf of Big Tech and governors from states in the forefront of expanding the power infrastructure required to accommodate the anticipated surge in electricity demand.

White House officials have argued that America can only win the AI race by rapidly increasing electricity generation and transmission, but that consumers shouldn't bear the financial burden. The initiative is being marketed by administration officials as a way to assure voters that AI investments and lower energy prices can coexist.

(source: Reuters)