Data centres and electric vehicles are expected to ramp up US power demand by about 300 terawatt-hours (TWh), equivalent to the electricity consumed annually by Turkey, by the end of the decade, according to consultancy Rystad Energy.

WHY IT’S IMPORTANT

The country’s rising power load could stress the US electrical grid, which has become increasingly vulnerable to shortfalls.

Rystad expects, however, solar capacity to increase by 237 gigawatts (GW) between 2023 and 2030 and wind capacity to grow by 78 GW, which the firm said should be enough to meet increased US power demand from data centres and EVs.

CONTEXT

US electricity demand had been flat at around 4,000 terawatt-hours since around 2010, Rystad said.

Now electricity demand is accelerating from the rapid build-out of data centers needed to develop generative artificial intelligence and from government and corporate climate pledges that hinge on electrifying industries such as transportation.

KEY QUOTE

“This growth is a race against time to expand power generation without overwhelming electricity systems to the point of stress,” said Rystad analyst Surya Hendry. “If you envision cleaner roads and sustainable AI for the future, renewable energy is the key to meeting this demand and providing the scalability needed for US power systems to endure.”

BY THE NUMBERS

On top of power consumption by data centres and EVs, Rystad projects the addition of 175 TWh of US power demand by 2030 from residential, commercial and industrial sectors, growing the country’s needs to nearly 4,500 TWh.