Electric
Power demand and the debate over whether data centers raise electricity costs for communities.
How much electricity these facilities use, and who pays for the grid upgrades, is one of the most debated topics — and one where claims are easy to exaggerate in either direction. The sources below include the underlying data, the cost concerns, and a fact-check plus a counterpoint.
Research / News
Electricity use and cost to ratepayers
Mixed sources so you can see both the concerns and the pushback.
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2024 LBNL Data Center Energy Usage Report
Primary U.S. data on data center electricity use and projections to 2028.
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Data center power demands and higher energy bills
Explains interconnection requests and rate increases; notes utilities sought large rate hikes and that residential prices rose in 2025.
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How data centers may lead to higher electricity bills
Interview with the director of Harvard's Electricity Law Initiative on how infrastructure and market costs spread to all ratepayers.
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Data centers' effect on electricity prices (fact-check)
Checks a widely shared '267%' claim, rating it Mostly False and clarifying the difference between wholesale node prices and household bills.
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Carnegie Mellon estimate via Pew
Summarizes a Carnegie Mellon estimate that data centers and crypto could add about 8% to the average U.S. electricity bill by 2030.
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A skeptical view: data centers and prices
Opinion piece arguing steady large loads can lower per-unit costs and that price increases stem mostly from supply constraints.
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Cascade Municipal Utilities board records
Local angle: Cascade runs its own utility. CMU board agendas and minutes are the place to track local power decisions.
Reading these carefully
Two things to keep separate
Wholesale prices vs. your monthly bill
Some dramatic percentages describe wholesale prices at specific grid points, which are only one part of a residential bill (alongside transmission, distribution, and taxes). The PolitiFact link above walks through this distinction.
Hyperscale loads vs. a small mine
Much of the cost research concerns very large loads. The local proposal is smaller; its actual power demand is something reporting says the company agreed to disclose. Track that figure through the CEDC and council records.