
FERC
US grid regulator; June 2026 show-cause orders to six RTOs pushed the large-load connection rule to 2027.
Last refreshed: 28 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
With the 202(c) order issued and RM26-4-000 closing in June, what powers does FERC now hold over US data centres?
Timeline for FERC
Required six RTOs to file generation-adequacy reports by 20 July
Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: FERC sets a 20 July adequacy deadlineMentioned in: Chevron builds Microsoft a gas plant
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashMentioned in: Texas queue swells to 438 GW
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashIssued Section 206 show-cause orders to six RTOs instead of a final large-load rule
Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: FERC delays its grid rule to 2027Mentioned in: Indiana freezes its 12th county on AI
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashDid FERC issue a final rule on data centre grid connections in June 2026?
Can FERC force data centres to switch off during a grid emergency?
What is FERC and what powers does it have over data centres?
Background
FERC announced on 16 April 2026 that it would act by end of June on Docket RM26-4-000, the rulemaking to standardise how new electricity loads above 20 MW connect to the US interstate transmission grid. The proceeding was opened under Section 403 of the DOE Organisation Act by Energy Secretary Chris Wright in October 2025. On 18 June 2026, FERC met the Deadline but chose its slowest available tool: rather than a final binding rule, it issued Section 206 show-cause orders to all six US RTOs, directing PJM, MISO, SPP, CAISO, ISO-NE, and NYISO to justify their large-load tariffs or propose reforms across five areas. Show-cause responses are due 17 August 2026, public comments 16 September; the RM26-4-000 docket remains open with no binding standard attached, pushing any final rule to 2027 at the earliest.
On 18 May 2026, FERC's authority was further demonstrated when the Department of Energy issued a Section 202(c) order, citing the Winter Storm Elliott precedent, granting PJM Interconnection authority to curtail data centres equipped with behind-the-meter backup generation during a heat emergency. The order was the second such 202(c) authorisation in 2026. It confirmed that federal emergency authority now extends from generation (Elliott 2022) to load (data centres 2026), transforming the risk calculus for operators building BTM gas fleets. The RM26-4-000 docket addresses three contested questions: co-location bypass of interconnection studies; BTM cost allocation; and who pays for transmission upgrades triggered by large loads. A ruling that is legally durable will accelerate large-load connections; one that is successfully challenged in court could stall them.