Why powering data centers with gas fired electricity comes with problems

Why a Plane-Size Machine Could Foil a Race to Build Gas Power Plants

nytimes.com  By Rebecca F. Elliott  April 8, 2025

Wait times for the hulking turbines needed to turn natural gas into electricity have doubled in the past year as companies scramble to build data centers for A.I.

To hear Trump administration officials and many energy executives tell it, the United States is on the precipice of a new golden age for natural gas that will be driven in large part by the voracious power needs of data centers.

But turning natural gas into electricity requires giant metal turbines that are increasingly difficult to secure. Companies that haven’t already reserved this equipment, which can weigh as much as a large airplane and cost hundreds of millions of dollars, are facing waits of three or four years, about twice as long as just a year earlier.

The cost of building gas power plants has also soared — so much so that in some parts of the country, solar panels and batteries are likely to be cheaper, energy executives and consultants said. By some estimates, it now costs two or three times as much to build a gas-fired power plant as it did a few years ago.

The challenge of securing enough gas turbines is one of the clearest examples of how booming investment in artificial intelligence is reshaping the electric power industry, overwhelming suppliers and upending longstanding notions of what makes sense financially.

It’s also a reminder of the gap that often exists between the plans and goals of politicians and executives and the reality on the ground.

U.S. gas demand is clearly rising, all the more so because of the data centers needed to train and use chatbots and other forms of A.I. But there are limits to how much more gas the country can use — limits that elected officials and energy tycoons cannot easily wish away.

GE Vernova, the biggest manufacturer of large gas turbines in the world, is among those betting that the recent flurry of interest in gas power will last. The company, formed last year in the breakup of General Electric, is spending more than $160 million to overhaul its gas turbine plant on the edge of Greenville, S.C.

By the end of next year, the 1.5-million-square-foot factory is expected to churn out about 35 percent more gas turbines. The building is a whirring, beeping expanse of partly automated assembly lines interspersed with metal turbine components.

“More electrons are going to be created from gas,” Scott Strazik, chief executive of GE Vernova, said in a recent interview. “Appetite is very real.”

About this time last year, interest in natural gas to power data centers picked up, catching much of the energy industry off guard.

Tech giants like Microsoft and Google pledged years ago to lower their emissions. But as it has become clearer how much and how quickly their energy needs will grow, companies have turned to gas. When burned, natural gas produces carbon dioxide, the leading cause of climate change. But gas plants can be built faster than nuclear power plants and operate all day, unlike wind and solar energy.

As sales of turbines climbed, so did wait times and prices. It takes about four months for GE Vernova to assemble the turbines used in power plants. But that clock starts only after the company has received all the components, like the dense metal fins that catch hot air inside the turbine, causing a rotor to spin.

These days, the backlog is so severe as to be reminiscent of the snarled supply chains of the pandemic, which constrained production of cars, medical devices and much more.

Between those delays and the time it takes to build a power plant, a company starting from scratch today would probably not have a new gas plant running before 2030. Other critical electrical equipment like transformers is also harder to get.

By comparison, a large solar project that includes batteries to store energy for use in the evening could reasonably be completed in three years, said Jesse Noffsinger, a partner at the consulting firm McKinsey & Company.

Chris Wright, the energy secretary, said the Trump administration was encouraging power equipment suppliers to increase U.S. manufacturing capacity. In an interview, he also floated the possibility of invoking the Defense Production Act, which authorizes the president to extend loans and take other steps to encourage companies to produce critical equipment. President Trump used the law, enacted in 1950, to boost production of things like ventilators during the pandemic.

Mr. Wright, who previously led an oil and gas company, said he expected natural gas to soon meet about half the country’s electricity needs, up from 43 percent last year. As for wind and solar, “they’re going to continue to play some role,” Mr. Wright said. “But are they going to be backbones of an electricity grid? Never.”

Mr. Wright is much more optimistic than other energy experts were about gas. Consulting firms like McKinsey and Rystad Energy expect gas power’s share of the U.S. electricity market to remain relatively steady as renewables grow more quickly.

It is hard to compare the cost of gas power with that of solar panels or wind turbines and batteries. That is because it is not always sunny or windy, meaning other power sources are sometimes needed to complement renewables. Gas costs also add up over time and can spike during crises, as they did after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. By contrast, solar and wind farms cost relatively little to operate once they are built.

Generally speaking, building a gas power plant can now be about as expensive as installing solar panels paired with batteries, according to Rystad, when including tax credits that apply to renewable energy and storage. One big factor is that gas turbines now cost about 50 percent more than they did just 10 months ago, according to the investment bank Jefferies.

“We’re in this weird no man’s land where it’s very profitable to run a plant and it’s clear we’re going to need more electricity,” Mr. Noffsinger of McKinsey said of gas plants. But in some markets, he added, it is unclear whether building new ones will make financial sense.

Lawmakers in Texas, which gets about 30 percent of its electricity from renewable energy, have sought to ensure gas plants get built anyway. The state’s Senate recently passed a bill aimed at ensuring that half of any new generation capacity comes from sources other than wind, solar and batteries. The House has not yet taken up the bill.

“My biggest concern is: How big? How long?” Bill Newsom, chief executive of another gas turbine manufacturer, Mitsubishi Power Americas, said of the current flurry of interest in gas. “I lose sleep over it every night.”

This year, 93 percent of the electricity capacity added to U.S. grids will be renewable energy and battery storage, according to the Energy Information Administration. Gas will account for just 7 percent.

S&P Global Commodity Insights recently estimated that by 2040, the United States would need to add at least nine times as much renewable energy and batteries as gas generation capacity to meet new electricity demand. That is partly because many customers prefer renewable energy, and various bottlenecks are slowing the construction of gas-fired power plants.

But forecasts vary widely, even over just the next few years. Complicating matters is that utilities have often overstated power needs. From 2012 to 2023, utility planners overestimated electricity demand by 23 percent, on average, in their 10-year forecasts, according to RMI, a nonprofit research organization that aims to reduce emissions.

Joseph Dominguez, who runs the country’s largest nuclear power plant operator, is among those who question how big the gas power boom will ultimately be. His company, Constellation Energy, struck a $16.4 billion deal in January to buy Calpine, which owns many gas power plants.

“But that’s a very different thing than saying that I would invest to replicate that fleet today,” Mr. Dominguez said. He pulled up a chart on his tablet showing how much scientists expect global temperatures to rise in the coming decades. Last year was the hottest on record.

“This world portends to be quite ugly for its inhabitants and will drive political outcomes that are radically different than those which we’re discussing today,” Mr. Dominguez said.

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A very interesting read for sure Skip.  I work on the Richland Parish data center site at Holly Ridge that will cover more than 2500 acres and will have it own Power Plants.   They do consume massive amounts of power.  This one will consume upwards of 40 percent of its provider power on a given day.  I think the Haynesville shale is in a great position to supply the power for these sites.  It takes a lot of water for cooling to.   Where one center locates others will show up as well.  The Tech majors all look for a lot land and cheap energy for these massive facilities.  We have that here.  The one thing that is concerning is the grid.  During the last few week Louisiana has experienced two load shed events with SPP (Southwest Power Pool) SWEPC around Shreveport and MISO(Midcontinent Independent System Operator)Entergy and Cleco in the New Orleans area.  To continue to attract centers like this the grid is going to have to have some investment.  The Holly Ridge site covers about 7 miles in length and is a mile wide.  The folks around Holly Ridge refer to the site as their version of the Haynesville Shale.   I hope it is a win for both.  

Thanks, Marc.  In many ways NE LA and indeed much of the ARK-LA-TX is a good fit for data centers with the exception that you mention regarding grid reliability.  Data centers need behind the meter reliability and Entergy is unable to provide reliable power even with new gas fired power plants.  The better fit for data center power needs is geothermal.  My geothermal map shows all of N LA especially west of Lincoln Parish to be capable of delivering geothermal power using current technology.  Most of what I read about the investors in data centers indicates that they prefer to generate their electrical needs without relying on fossil fuels.

That is true.  A lot of options are on the table but the are going with gas on this one to start with. The Tech Majors have there ideas for sure including modular nuclear reactors.  These plants have been approved by the Public Service Commission and will be built.  Both Entergy and AEP should do more modernization of the grids and perhaps do more conversions of older plants to (Gas , Geo Thermal) in the North LA area.   Instead of completely shutting them down.  That would help.  But the grid here is in better shape than the ones around Richmond and other places where these things are.   

Wherever there is a coal fired or old obsolete gas fired plant with grid connection that is to be abandoned, they should be considered for geothermal potential.  I touched on the Richland Parish data center regarding geothermal or gas fired power in my interview with the University of Minnesota.

Google announces massive partnership that could unleash limitless underground energy source: 'It's time to get boots on the ground'

"It is our ambition … that we shift the massive potential of geothermal from the abstract into high-impact reality."

https://www.thecooldown.com/green-business/global-geothermal-energy...

Very neat article.   There are things that I can not speak to because of NDA's about the project.  This is phase 1.  It will have 3 phases over there.  Phase 2 will begin soon.  Keep watching for phase 2 announcements.  You are very close with the above post.   This brings up a point. I am with you it is time for the boots to get on the ground.  We have an interesting coordinating effort with Tech and Energy.  The Tech majors have Market Valuations Equal to the GDP of Saudi Arabia or greater  with the Cash Flow to invest in areas like the above article.  I think the Richland Parish project will lay the ground work for more expansion in the North LA area given our energy presence and hopefully our ability work with the energy industry to meet the needs of the future.   

I understand and will look forward to the next announcement.

Thanks for posting this, Skip. Interesting. As always, NG build-outs are way more complicated than most people realize. 

You're welcome, Jesse.  I'm disappointed that geothermal hasn't caught on more before now.  It's trending but I don't think it needs a lot of innovation beyond what exists now when utilized in the right locales. 

I can understand why geothermal has been so, so slow to develop. Not enough "dogs" in the build-out to engage larger swaths of the public's attention, i.e., not enough special interest groups to benefit from the ramp up. In other words, a hard-to-relate to technology. Whereas with NG, thousands and thousands (e.g., individuals like us and local businesses, along with major corporations and worldwide operators) benefit from its production and usage. Connecting networks of benefactors adds needed oomph to major investments in infrastructure/technology, etc. At least, that's my opinion. Others might disagree.

Gas fired power plants on the grid are a huge problem for those needing uninterrupted power.  Data centers are certainly exhibit one but there are others.  Small crypto farms currently run on behind the meter power and AI will likely prioritize non fossil fuel power.  Evolving technology will incentivize new geothermal projects.

Ai might be the death of us all. Like in the sci-fi plots when robots/computer brains circumvent the ethical "do no harm ethos." The whole human race could have a comeuppance per letting such a high-tech genie out of the proverbial bag. ***Think about what a chat-bot could do on this forum. Such unfettered chatter would be the death of believability.***      

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GoHaynesvilleShale.com (GHS) was launched in 2008 during a pivotal moment in the energy industry, when the Haynesville Shale formation—a massive natural gas reserve lying beneath parts of northwest Louisiana, east Texas, and southwest Arkansas—was beginning to attract national attention. The website was the brainchild of Keith Mauck, a landowner and entrepreneur who recognized a pressing need: landowners in the region had little access to…

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