A $12 Billion Window Into AI’s Race for Power

The artificial intelligence arms race has prompted a contest for America’s power plants. NRG Energy Inc.’s acquisition of a gas-fired fleet comes a few months after Constellation Energy Corp.’s even bigger deal for Calpine Corp. US power generation deals announced through mid-May add up to $51 billion, more than in any entire year this century save one.

NRG’s offers a $12 billion proof point that Big Tech’s datacenter boom, among other things, demands vast quantities of power. It also underscores a related point: History shows the US will struggle to build the plants required to generate that power.

power banking

It is not often that a company announces an acquisition worth roughly a third of its own enterprise value and investors cheer it on. That NRG’s stock popped by 26% on Monday partly reflects the company drawing a line under previous management’s missteps. An ill-received and ill-timed pivot toward retail power and services had left NRG short of generation just as demand for electricity takes off again after years of flatlining.1 The assets acquired from LS Power LLC correct this and also rebalances NRG’s Texas-centric business toward a bigger presence in the datacenter heartland, the PJM grid covering a swath of the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic states. Moreover, as Constellation did with Calpine, NRG is paying partly with a slug of its own stock, with LS Power’s pending 11% stake signaling a vote of confidence.

NRG estimates it is paying about half of what it would cost to build new power plants. The latter is a somewhat nebulous number but has definitely moved higher. John Ketchum, Chief Executive Officer of NextEra Energy Inc., a large utility operator, estimated recently that the cost of new gas-fired capacity has gone from less than $800 per kilowatt of capacity to $2,400 in the space of just a few years.