HARRISBURG, Pa. — Federal regulators will allow tech companies to effectively plug massive data centers directly into power plants, issuing a long-awaited order Thursday, as the Trump administration urges it to help the U.S. lead the world in artificial intelligence and revive domestic manufacturing.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's unanimous order is designed to clear up pressing issues around so-called ''colocation'' agreements in the nation's largest grid territory, which stretches across mid-Atlantic states to parts of Illinois and Indiana.
But it could become a blueprint for how FERC handles an October request from Trump's energy secretary, Chris Wright, to ensure that data centers and large manufacturers get the power they need as quickly as possible.
It also comes amid concerns that the mid-Atlantic territory covering some 65 million people will face electricity shortages in the coming years, as the build out of data centers outpaces the speed of new power sources coming online.
Laura Swett, FERC's chair, told Thursday's meeting that clearing the way for massive energy users — like data centers — to get electricity straight from power plants was a ''critical step to give investors and consumers more certainty on how FERC believes we can solve the problem of meeting historic surging demand and realize our greatest potential as a country.''
It would, she said, also protect regular ratepayers, even as evidence mounts in various states that regular ratepayers are bearing the cost of new power plants and transmission lines to feed energy hungry data centers.
Power plant owners applauded the step, as their share prices rose steeply in Thursday's trading. Advanced Energy United, whose members provide solar and wind power, said the FERC order should help clarify how big power users can set up their own power sources.
The Edison Electric Institute, which represents for-profit utilities, said only that it would ''continue to work'' to support rapid data center connection, protect ratepayers from cost-shifts and strengthen the grid for everyone.