Rep. Brett Guthrie, the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, is drawing a line in the sand on who foots the bill for America’s AI infrastructure boom. His message to tech companies is refreshingly simple: pay your own electricity bill.

Guthrie emphasized on June 16 that companies building and operating data centers must cover their own energy costs, rather than shifting that financial burden onto residential customers.

The cost question nobody wants to answer

Current projections suggest that data center electricity loads could double or triple by 2028. When a massive data center plugs into a local power grid, the utility often needs to upgrade transmission lines, build new substations, or secure additional generation capacity. Without clear rules, those costs can get rolled into the rate base that every customer pays.

To address this directly, Guthrie supports the proposed Ratepayer Protection Act, which would prevent data centers from shifting their infrastructure costs to residential ratepayers.