The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is moving to untangle one of the biggest bottlenecks facing the AI boom: actually plugging data centers into the electrical grid. FERC announced on April 16 that it plans to take decisive action on Docket No. RM26-4-000 by the end of June 2026, a timeline that signals unusual urgency for a federal regulator not exactly known for its speed.
The docket targets interconnection reform for large electricity loads, specifically facilities drawing more than 20 megawatts.
What’s actually changing
The reforms trace back to an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that the US Department of Energy initiated on October 23, 2025, under Secretary Chris Wright. That ANOPR laid out several strategies for getting power-hungry facilities online faster, including co-location with generation sites, expedited study processes, and shifting interconnection costs more directly onto the entities requesting the connection.
FERC had already tipped its hand on this approach back on December 18, 2025, when it issued an order directing PJM Interconnection to develop new rules supporting exactly this kind of arrangement. PJM is the largest grid operator in the US, managing the transmission system across 13 states and the District of Columbia. The December order mandated three new transmission service options specifically designed for data centers co-located with power generation facilities.












