Texas is poised to set a new record for peak energy demand this summer, driven by scorching temperatures and surging needs from new data centers and air conditioning use.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), the state’s power grid operator, projects a peak demand of 87,500 megawatts, surpassing the August 2023 record of 85,464 megawatts and significantly higher than the 74,650 megawatts in 2021.
The increase is fueled, in part, by data centers powering AI and cloud storage, which is expected to grow from 2,400 megawatts next year to over 22,000 megawatts by 2030. Rising cryptocurrency production is also contributing to the demand for electricity, although it is expected to account for only a third of the demand for data centers within five years.
Despite the strain, ERCOT anticipates the grid will meet demand, bolstered by increased solar production and battery storage capacity. However, emergency alerts are most likely in August after 9 p.m., when solar output declines.
“It has become statistically challenging to record a hotter-than-normal summer,” ERCOT forecaster Chris Coleman wrote, per Axios Dallas.
He noted that six of Texas’ 10 hottest summers have occurred in the last decade. Last summer ranked as the seventh-hottest on record, despite above-average rainfall.
ERCOT expects energy use to continue rising over the next five years as Texas’ population grows and summers intensify, pushing the grid to adapt to unprecedented demand.