Sign up today to get the best of our expert insight in your inbox
A solution to the problem of paying for data center power?
Unpacking AWS’s recent 3 gigawatt deal with NIPSCO
Ed Crooks
Vice Chair Americas and host of Energy Gang podcast
Ed Crooks
Vice Chair Americas and host of Energy Gang podcast
Ed examines the forces shaping the energy industry globally.
Latest articles by Ed
-
Opinion
The US oil industry is consolidating as growth slows
-
Opinion
Energy storage steps up
-
Opinion
How the US power system coped with the threat from Winter Storm Fern
-
Opinion
International buyers find value in US gas assets
-
Opinion
The Trump administration moves to curb rising US electricity bills
-
Opinion
What Big Oil needs to invest in Venezuela
Data centres have become one of the most contentious issue in US power markets. The question of who will pay for the new generation and grid upgrades needed to keep them running has been soaring up the political agenda, and attracting attention in the White House.
Host Ed Crooks is joined on this episode by Brandon Oyer, Head of Americas Power & Water at Amazon Web Services (AWS), and Vince Parisi, President & COO at NIPSCO, the Northern Indiana Public Service Company, to discuss a solution.
Together, they unpack their new agreement to develop power capacity in northern Indiana, which they say will enable AWS to add 2.4 gigawatts of data centre capacity without sticking everyone else with the bill.
Data centres are not just for AI: they are the “invisible digital backbone” behind everything from banking to healthcare to emergency services, Brandon says. But he also acknowledges that local communities around data centre developments are right to ask hard questions about costs. NIPSCO and other utilities agree. Vince says they welcome the economic activity and tax revenues that new data centres bring, but the goal for the electricity system is to ensure customers “aren’t paying for it.”
AWS and NIPSCO say their agreement, which they announced last November, will achieve that goal. In fact, they expect to save customers money, unlocking $1 billion in customer savings over 15 years.
So what actually makes this deal different, and is it a template others can copy? Brandon and Vince walk through the ring-fenced structure (a separate GenCo that funds and builds generation), the performance incentives, and why both sides landed on a 15-year commitment even as data-centre hardware cycles every few years. You’ll also hear why AWS doesn’t see its data centres as truly flexible loads, how the GenCo model let NIPSCO lock in long-lead equipment early, and what plugging this capacity into the MISO power market means for the reliability of electricity supplies.
Let us know what you think. We’re on X, at @theenergygang and Bluesky, at @theenergygang.bsky.social.
Energy Gang is a bi-weekly podcast. Join Ed Crooks and the gang for their take on the biggest energy stories shaping the world, with sharp analysis from top experts in climate, policy and the energy industry.