AUSTIN, Texas — Governor Greg Abbott has directed state energy regulators to ensure Texas’s booming data center industry pays its own way, as artificial intelligence facilities strain the state’s power grid and water supplies. The governor set a July 17 deadline for the Public Utility Commission and ERCOT to deliver a memorandum on how to make data center connections reduce residential electric bills and require the facilities to fund their own infrastructure.
The scale of the demand is unprecedented. Texas currently hosts roughly 300 operational data centers, with more than 100 under construction and at least 100 more planned. ERCOT, the state’s grid operator, reports that 87 percent of projects seeking grid connection approval are data centers, with total capacity forecast to surpass 70 gigawatts by 2030 — enough electricity to power tens of millions of homes.
ERCOT CEO Pablo Vegas has stressed that the next two to three years are critical for building new power infrastructure. The grid operator has shifted from a first-come, first-served to an evidence-based queue management system, requiring developers to demonstrate site control, permits, financing, and equipment orders to separate committed projects from speculative requests.
Texas is the epicenter of AI development, where companies can pair innovation with expanding energy. We must ensure that America remains at the forefront of the AI revolution, and Texas is the place where that can happen.
