
NESO
UK National Energy System Operator; managing a 50 GW data-centre grid queue that exceeds national peak demand — the bottleneck that drove OpenAI to pause its UK Stargate site.
Last refreshed: 6 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can NESO's Curate reform shift enough of 125 GW of queue to unlock UK data centre investment?
Timeline for NESO
Mentioned in: Seattle locks in its data-centre freeze
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashMentioned in: SoftBank bets EUR 75bn on France
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashIssued the first transmission connection offers under Gate 2 Phase 1 beginning mid-May 2026
Data Centres: Boom and Backlash: UK Gate 2 grid offers begin issuingMentioned in: Where the next data centres should go
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashMentioned in: OpenAI puts a number on UK electricity gap
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashWhy is the UK data centre grid queue so long?
What is NESO and what replaced National Grid ESO?
How long does a UK grid connection take for a data centre?
Background
NESO (National Energy System Operator) became the UK's independent energy system operator in October 2024, replacing the previous National Grid ESO function. Its most acute near-term challenge is a grid-connection queue that has become a structural bottleneck for data-centre investment: the queue holds 50 GW of demand from approximately 140 data centres, against a national peak electricity demand of 45 GW recorded in February 2026. Total contracted offers in the demand queue reached 125 GW by mid-2025. The queue was a direct factor in OpenAI's April 2026 decision to pause its Cobalt Park Stargate site, with OpenAI citing an "unfavourable regulatory environment" and UK industrial electricity at more than four times US, Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish rates.
NESO's formation as a government-owned body separate from National Grid gives it a mandate to plan the energy system as a whole, not merely operate the existing network. That distinction matters for data centres: NESO can in principle prioritise or deprioritise connection requests based on national need. The organisation is jointly responsible with Ofgem for the Curate queue-reform programme, which aims to accelerate the de-queuing of speculative projects that have held slots for years without building. In May 2026, NESO's connections-reform programme unlocked 381.5 GW of previously blocked capacity — but this is primarily generation-side; the data-centre demand queue remains its primary bottleneck.
NESO's queue problem has cross-topic significance: the 50 GW DC queue is one of three factors that removed the UK from the top-10 global data-centre siting list in May 2026, alongside the energy-cost gap and a regulatory environment that OpenAI described as unfavourable. That puts the UK in the same tier as Dublin — grid-constrained, expensive, and losing greenfield investment to the Nordic countries, Aragón, and West Texas.