For example, a joint venture — Crusoe and Tallgrass — recently announced plans for a computational campus south of Cheyenne requiring 1,800 megawatts of electricity, then “hyperscale” to 10,000 megawatts. That’s equal to Wyoming’s existing generation capacity, and it’s merely the latest in a series of data center proposals targeting the state.
Prometheus Hyperscale is partnering with others to add 1,200 megawatts of electricity for data centers in southwest Wyoming, while Microsoft and Meta are spending hundreds of millions of dollars on power-thirsty data centers around Cheyenne. Local utilities say they field new inquiries weekly.
Opinions vary about whether Wyoming is prepared to meet the demand and how it might impact “legacy” or regular utility customers in the state.
“How chaotic can this get?” Gillette Republican Rep. Christopher Knapp quipped during a recent Corporations, Elections and Political Subdivisions meeting. “Eventually it’s going to affect every region and, overall, the state’s typical legacy way of regulating.”
Staggering Demand Raises Questions About Regular Ratepayers
For example, Cheyenne Light, Fuel and Power, and its parent company Black Hills Energy, trailblazed the concept with Microsoft back in 2015, leading to a successful series of data center additions that continues today, according to the utility’s Governmental Affairs Manager David Bush. Rather than build new power plants to feed Microsoft’s data centers, the utility acquires electricity on the open market, and its contract provides it can “interrupt” the power delivery when necessary — in the case of a major outage or grid-locking spike in power demand during, say, a severe cold snap.
The utility’s regular ratepayers didn’t have to help shoulder the cost for new power plants, and their service remains a priority when the chips are down.
Regulated utilities, as well as nonprofit co-ops and state regulators, mostly agree Wyoming’s large-load rule goes a long way to accommodate data centers while protecting the average ratepayer. But, the scale of the digital goldrush is staggering, some warn, and threatens to overrun all manner of business-as-usual.
Consider this: Wyoming’s electrical generation capacity stands at about 10,200 megawatts. All of the homes, businesses, mines, refineries and manufacturers in the state combined require only about 40 percent of that power, according to federal data. The rest is exported.
But that “excess” power generation doesn’t mean Wyoming’s megawatts can simply be redistributed to digital cowboys wanting to set up shop in the state. That’s not how utilities work, and besides, data center developers are making similar demands throughout the nation, scouring for whatever new source of electrical generation can be switched on the fastest — be it natural gas, wind, solar or nuclear.
After more than a decade of relatively flat electrical demand in the U.S., AI queries, digital streaming, bitcoin mining and other computations — along with systems to cool hard-working servers — increased to account for 4.4 percent of all U.S. electrical consumption in 2023, according to the Department of Energy’s 2024 Report on U.S. Data Center Energy Use. The report estimates that by 2028, those computations will account for 12 percent.
The demand, whether it’s 50 percent or 100 percent — or more — of current electricity output in Wyoming and the surrounding region, is likely to stress regulatory safeguards and, depending on how the systems are designed, water resources and air quality.
State's Efforts
The Wyoming Energy Authority is leading a stakeholders’ working group to try to find consensus on a wise regulatory approach that takes advantage of the economic opportunities without putting regular electric ratepayers — and their providers — at risk. Most involved agree that the party that places any new cost on the system ought to pay that cost. However, nothing in the realm of utilities and regulation is quite that simple, Wyoming Public Service Commission Deputy Chairman Chris Petrie warned.
Some data developers propose bypassing existing utilities, or only relying on them for backup power, by building their own electric generating facilities, or striking a deal with a “third-party” non-public utility power generator that serves only a handful of data customers. But what happens if those plans go awry?
“One way or the other, it all has to be sorted out so that costs get allocated to the causer, and it’s a super complicated, involved affair when you’re actually doing it,” Petrie testified. “But the concept is that if you cause the cost you pay the cost.”
Wyoming Energy Authority Executive Director Rob Creager said stakeholders in the working group have not yet reached consensus on recommendations to lawmakers for how to potentially tweak Wyoming’s regulatory landscape to deal with the issue. The group plans to bring its recommendations to the Legislature’s Corporations Committee in November.
Meantime, Creager said, Wyoming must grapple with how wide it wants to open its doors to the data industry — accounting for all its benefits and risks.
“What does the state want?” Creager posed to the panel. “What kind of growth and how do we want to supply that growth? Or do we want to supply that growth?”
This story first appeared in WyoFile. Read the original here.