The AI boom is putting new strain on electricity infrastructure, as data centers built by hyperscalers like Google, Anthropic, and Microsoft face growing scrutiny over rising power costs. From rural Virginia to the Arizona desert, local communities are questioning whether these massive facilities are driving up residential electricity prices.
In a report from a semiconductor analysis firm called SemiAnalysis, data centre growth is just part of the equation; market design and policy decisions are driving electricity price growth rather than just AI infrastructure.
The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports that US residential electricity prices have increased by over 36% since 2020 because prices rose from 12.76 cents to 17.44 cents per kilowatt-hour and are expected to reach 19.01 cents by 2027.
The base residual auction system used by PJM Interconnection estimates future demand at higher levels, which results in increased expenses for residential customers.
The major technology companies have made commitments to either cover their data centre electricity expenses completely or to finance renewable energy initiatives.
Microsoft established a five-point strategy which included funding additional energy expenses, and Anthropic followed with a comparable commitment. US President Donald Trump brought together AI executives to support the Ratepayer Protection Pledge, which intends to stop the transfer of new energy expenses to consumers.
However, experts remain sceptical. Counterpoint ResearchResearch Director Marc Einstein noted, “The problem is the industry’s not making money, so that puts even more pressure on them.” JLL Head of Data Center Account ManagementChris Howard added that renewable energy commitments and community investments could help ease public concern.