After years of negotiations, data centers and other large customers of Georgia Power have finally won a pathway to pay for their own new clean energy projects to be built and connected to the utility’s grid.
If it works as planned, the new customer-identified resource, or CIR, program could help prevent data center growth from raising power bills for Georgia Power’s customers at large — and offer a template for other utilities and regulators wrestling with similar issues nationwide.
Georgia Power is planning one of the largest new fossil-fuel buildouts in the country. Over the next five years, the utility wants to build nearly 10 gigawatts of new capacity resources, roughly 60% of which would come from natural gas power plants. The utility says it needs this new capacity to keep the grid running as power-hungry data centers flood into the state.
Those new power plants may be justifiable if the proposed data centers get constructed and keep operating long enough for the utility to recoup the costs through electricity sales. But if the AI bubble deflates, as more and more industry observers fear will happen, then the cost of paying off those utility investments could fall on everyday customers.






