The age of AI is ushering in the golden age of American energy.
Why it matters: Long prized for being boring — cheap, reliable, predictable — American power is exploding with new growth, new wild ideas and new sci-fi level possibilities.
It's a massive growth engine for the U.S. economy and brimming with once-unimaginable investment and experimentation.
- The tech and energy industries — and perceptions of them — are shifting fast and often in counterintuitive ways.
The big picture: AI sucks up most of the media and public attention. But our energy landscape is also changing at an unprecedented clip to power that AI.
Reality check: As with past energy golden ages — shale oil and gas, electrification, the rise of cars — this one carries its own underbelly: data center backlash, higher power prices and new equity concerns.
How it works: The AI boom is shifting the tectonic plates of our stubborn energy systems. One tectonic plate has been squarely in our face (and our power bills) this past year. Three others are also sliding into place.
Let's break them down:
- A data center land rush is pushing up electricity prices, igniting NIMBY fights and straining grid reliability. The latest sign of stress: The NAACP is holding an event this week called "Stop Dirty Data" to highlight its concerns.
- Skyrocketing power demand is boosting once-too-expensive clean-energy technologies — from advanced nuclear to carbon capture — by giving them massive prospective customers such as Google and Microsoft willing to pay top dollar.
- AI itself could accelerate cleantech breakthroughs, including long-promised dreams like fusion. It's already helping with geothermal discoveries.
- AI is also boosting oil and gas, improving subsurface mapping and squeezing more fuel out of existing fields.
"Artificial intelligence is, ultimately, within the industry, going to be the next fracking boom," Mike Sommers, head of the American Petroleum Institute, told Axios. "It is going to allow us to explore the subsurface in a way we never have before."
Driving the news: AI could "unlock an extra trillion barrels of oil," Wood Mackenzie wrote in a recent report.
- The consultancy says its new proprietary AI tech is allowing companies to better identify where they "can wring substantially more oil out of producing reservoirs."
- In layperson's terms: AI is squeezing more juice out of the same orange.
Between the lines: Like real tectonic plates, these four forces don't move in isolation — they collide, reinforce and undermine one another in ways that we're only beginning to grasp.
- Plate No. 1 (data-center demand) is pushing Plate No. 2 (novel clean energy). With cheap power getting harder to find, hyperscalers are turning to advanced nuclear and natural gas with carbon capture — options that may arrive sooner than once anticipated because of the AI push, but at higher cost in the meantime.
- Plate No. 3 (AI accelerating innovation) could eventually counteract the first plate. If AI speeds up breakthroughs in storage, nuclear and grid optimization, it could bring power costs back down and support climate goals.
- Plates No. 2 and 3 form a feedback loop. Think of it as a modern Ouroboros: tech companies bankroll pricey clean-energy projects to power AI; AI then helps lower the cost of those same technologies; cheaper clean power then feeds the next wave of AI growth.
- Plate No. 4 (AI boosting fossil fuels) could relieve pressure on prices — but complicate climate math. More natural gas production could help keep electricity affordable in the near term, even as additional fossil fuel output risks widening the emissions gap.
Friction point: Like an actual earthquake, these tectonic shifts are not clean, simple or predictable.
- Novel clean tech, like advanced nuclear power and carbon capture at power plants, are (still) years away. In the meantime, natural gas and diesel are often winning out — alongside renewables and battery storage.
- The oil and gas industry — and prices for those commodities — are influenced by a number of things, and there are still questions over AI's ability to alter the long-term supply of oil. Instead, it will more simply boost the efficiency of operations, analysts say.
- If the AI boom turns out to be a bubble and bursts, as some analysts predict, this energy gusher could dry up just as fast as it has opened, risking billions of dollars of stranded assets.
What we're watching: The potential for Democrats to wrest control of one or both houses of Congress in the wake of next year's midterm elections could wildly affect the four tectonic plates shifting beneath us now.
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