BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  The American people shoul
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Fri, 6 Mar 2026 11:47:53 -0500
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The American people should not be footing the bill for the benefit of private
companies': Tech giants sign White House pledge to not pass on data center
electricity costs to consumers - here's everything you need to know

Date:
Thu, 05 Mar 2026 17:05:00 +0000

Description:
The Ratepayer Protection Pledge has been signed by numerous hyperscalers and
AI companies, and seeks to prevents American consumers footing the bill for
increased energy demand due to data centers.

FULL STORY

The White House has introduced the Ratepayer Protection Pledge
The pledge seeks to avoid the cost of energy from data centers being passed
on to American consumers
Many of the biggest tech and AI companies have already signed

The White House has put forward a voluntary commitment for private companies
to bear the cost of rising electricity prices due to the increased demand for
data centers to power AI. 

The Ratepayer Protection Pledge will encourage private companies to build,
bring, or buy new energy sources to offset the demand from data centers. The
pledge has already been signed by several of the biggest hyperscalers and AI
companies, including Amazon , Google , Meta, Microsoft , OpenAI, Oracle, and
xAI.

The Ratepayer Protection Pledge

The pledge outlines that private companies will be able to
build their own energy sources in the US to cover their electricity usage in
order to avoid passing the costs of energy and infrastructural demand on to
consumers. This means that private companies will also have to cover the cost
of the infrastructure upgrades needed to meet their demand. 

At the signing event for the Ratepayer Protection Pledge, President Donald
Trump said, This means that the tech companies and the data centers will be
able to get the electricity they need, all without driving up electricity
costs for consumers. This is a historic win for countless American families
and well also make our electricity grid stronger and more resilient than ever
before. 

President Trump also commented on the future of energy prices for Americans,
stating, Theyre not going to be going up. Theyre going to be actually going
down. In short, Americas largest and richest tech companies will be funding a
colossal expansion of U.S. energy. How have prices risen so far? According to
the US Energy Information Administration, retail energy prices in the US have
risen faster than the rate of inflation since 2022 , with the average US
familys electricity bill rising 7% year-over-year since September.

However, areas with significantly higher data center projects have seen 
prices skyrocket by as much as 267% over the last five years. Whether these
areas will see their prices to be actually going down remains to be seen. 
What energy sources will be built? The Trump administration has been 
skeptical of the human effect on climate change, with Trump revoking the
ruling that greenhouse gases are harmful to human health in February of this
year. The administration has also cut subsidies on renewable energy , and has
introduced an expedited approval process for new fossil fuel energy projects.

Environmental restrictions on coal, oil, and gas have also been lifted, with
Trumps National Energy Dominance Council (NEDC) securing $15 billion in
funding for new energy projects in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest to 
potentially reopen coal and natural gas plants closed under the Biden
administration.

Private companies are likely to take this as a clear indication of the types
of energy Trump would like private companies to build, despite renewable
sources remaining the cheapest option even with the cut in government
subsidies. If companies were to turn to renewable energy sources it would
likely harm Trumps stance on unreliable, foreign controlled energy sources. 

Outside of fossil fuels or renewables, there remains another option: nuclear.
Long term, nuclear is the option numerous US tech companies are betting on. 
In late 2024, Microsoft signed a deal with the Three Mile Island nuclear 
plant to supply energy for Redmonds AI computing demand, with the plant 
likely to reopen as soon as 2027 . 

Meta has also shown its ambitions to power data centers with nuclear energy.
The company signed a 20-year deal with the Clinton Clean Energy Center to
supply 1,121 megawatts of "emissions-free nuclear energy." Other nuclear
options include the use of small modular reactors (SMR), with Amazon pledging
to build twelve SMRs in order to supply 1GW of output by the next decade, 
with plans to supply a total of 5GW US grid by 2039.

The question remains on whether supply chains will be able to keep up with 
the demand from private companies seeking to build new energy projects as 
part of the pledge. High-voltage transformers, turbines, and other complex
electrical equipment are currently cheaper to import than to build in the US.
Trumps desire for America first industry may be put at odds with companies
seeking to upgrade energy infrastructure in the US. How will companies be 
held accountable? Currently, the Pledge is voluntary and holds no legal
binding. 

The pledge does not lay out any mechanisms of accountability, timelines, or
provisions on how much additional energy private companies will be required 
to provide alongside the demand for their data centers. 

We will have to wait and see if this is fleshed out at all, or if the Pledge
is simply a stunt to improve short-term public opinion by taking advantage of
existing individual commitments by tech companies to prevent energy price
increases. 

There is also the question of additional costs incurred by states themselves.
In order to attract investment by tech companies, many states have offered
incentives in return for data center construction , such as tax exemptions on
purchased equipment and construction, as well as business credits for local
employment. 

However, the newly incurred cost of having to build and supply their own
energy could lead companies to demand additional incentives and rate cuts -
which could effectively force states to trade tax revenue for an energy grid
capable of meeting demand - especially as demand for data centers outstrips
current supply.

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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/the-american-people-should-not-be-footing-the-bi
ll-for-the-benefit-of-private-companies-tech-giants-sign-white-house-pledge-to
-not-pass-on-data-center-electricity-costs-to-consumers-heres-everything-you-n
eed-to-know

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