Policy and Legal
New House AI, Energy Working Group 17吃瓜在线 RFI
The newly established House of Representatives鈥 AI and Energy Working Group is seeking information on the increase in energy demand we can expect due to the growing use of artificial intelligence (, subscription).
What鈥檚 going on: Group lead Rep. Julie Fedorchak (R-ND)鈥攚ho was North Dakota鈥檚 head utility regulator for more than a decade prior to being elected to Congress last year鈥攄iscussed the new working group with us Tuesday at 17吃瓜在线 headquarters.
- Rep. Fedorchak spoke at an at the 17吃瓜在线 on how the U.S. can strengthen the electrical grid, advance permitting reform and support manufacturers听investing in the latest energy technologies.
- The working group issued a on Monday, 鈥渋nvit[ing] stakeholders to provide written responses鈥 to questions under 鈥渢hree pillars,鈥 according to the RFI document.
The details: These pillars are the following:
- American Energy Dominance and AI Energy Demands: The RFI 鈥渟eeks to identify strategies to secure a stable, affordable and sustainable domestic energy supply capable of powering next-generation AI infrastructure.鈥 Subtopics on which respondents are asked to inform the working group include oil and gas, nuclear, solar, geothermal and other power production methods.
- Securing the Energy Grid: A resilient, secure electrical grid is 鈥渆ssential鈥 for AI systems and the larger 鈥渄igital economy,鈥 the document says. Permitting reform, electricity generation and baseload power are possible subtopics here.
- Strategic Competition: Outpacing China:听鈥淚n an era of intensifying global rivalry, ensuring American technological and energy leadership is critical.鈥 Some of the subtopics under this pillar are manufacturing, critical minerals and chips.听
Why it鈥檚 important: 鈥淭o be AI dominant, we must first be energy dominant,鈥 Rep. Fedorchak said in a statement, according to POLITICO Pro.
- 鈥淚n 2024, data centers accounted for 4.3% of total U.S. power demand, and analysts predict this could climb to as much as 12% by 2030鈥攎ore electricity than the entire state of Texas uses today. Yet the U.S. isn鈥檛 scaling up reliable baseload power quickly enough to support this rapid growth.鈥
How to respond: Responses are due by May 15 and should be emailed to [email protected].