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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
6MAY

Oregon clears a 29% big-load surcharge

2 min read
13:52UTC

Oregon regulators approved a 29% electricity-rate rise for data centres and other large loads on 7 July, cutting household bills as the biggest users absorb the grid's growing cost.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

Oregon prices data-centre grid costs onto the operators, cutting household bills while the biggest campuses pay most.

Oregon's Public Utility Commission (PUC), the state body that sets electricity tariffs, approved a 29% rate increase for large-load customers on Tuesday 7 July, effective the next day. 1 The rise covers Portland General Electric (PGE) customers drawing more than 20 megawatts (MW), the band that captures data centres, crypto miners and heavy industry. Residential bills fall 1.3% across roughly 963,000 customers, because the tariff shifts grid-reinforcement cost onto the loads that drive it.

The ruling closes a thread the beat has followed since PGE filed the 29% rise in June , then watched the PUC push its decision to 7 July on 200-page review grounds . It is the first fully approved cost-shift tariff now in force in the US. 2

The design answers a question PJM's board put to thirteen governors in May: who pays when the grid bends for AI. Oregon's regulator decided the load forcing the reinforcement should carry the cost, not the household next door. Above 100 MW the tariff adds a one-cent-per-kilowatt-hour (kWh) surcharge, so the largest campuses pay the steepest premium yet stay buildable. That is the counter-model to New York's freeze: price the load rather than block it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Oregon's utility regulator approved a new electricity rate for very large customers, mainly data centres, that raises their bills by 29% starting 8 July while cutting everyone else's bills by 1.3%. The idea is that big data centres should pay the actual cost of the power-grid upgrades they need, instead of that cost being spread across every household's bill. Only customers using 20 megawatts or more, roughly enough power for 16,000 homes, are affected, with an extra charge above 100 megawatts. Ordinary Oregon households will see a small saving, not a bill increase, from this decision.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 29% figure exists because Oregon's POWER Act, passed in 2025, requires utilities to charge large loads the full cost of serving them rather than spreading grid-upgrade costs across the general customer base; PGE's tariff is the first test of that principle in a live rate case, so the number reflects PGE's calculated incremental cost of serving 20 MW-plus sites, not a punitive rate set to discourage data centres.

The one-month delay from 10 June to 7 July existed because Tawney's commission needed to work through roughly 200 pages of tariff detail. The delay was procedural, not a signal the PUC intended to reject or soften PGE's filing.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Oregon's approved tariff gives other states weighing large-load cost-allocation rules a working model with an actual approved rate, not just a proposal.

  • Risk

    A 29% rate increase may push new hyperscale siting decisions toward states without an equivalent surcharge, shifting Oregon's cost problem rather than solving it.

First Reported In

Update #10 · New York freezes data centres by decree

KPTV· 15 Jul 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Global hyperscale operators
Global hyperscale operators
Operators are still filing gigawatt-scale campuses and Meta is proceeding with its $10bn Lebanon, Indiana site despite the county-level bans nearby, betting Q2 capex outruns the patchwork of restrictions. Industry framing casts New York's freeze, Oregon's surcharge and Indiana's bans as taxes and levies that push build-out toward faster-permitting jurisdictions such as India and the Gulf.
EirGrid
EirGrid
EirGrid set a 900 MW instantaneous demand-loss ceiling because a single voltage dip can trip many data centres onto backup power at once, risking imbalance above 1,150 MW. It wrote the limit into a standing procedure rather than waiting for an emergency to force one.
US host communities and ratepayers
US host communities and ratepayers
Prince William residents backed the 8-0 denial of Dulles South over the Occoquan watershed, drinking water for eight million people, while Oregon's approved tariff cuts residential bills 1.3% by charging large loads 29% more. Their position: consent and cost-attribution belong in law, not left to a developer's or a utility's discretion.
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure, an Egyptian conglomerate rather than a foreign hyperscaler, reportedly secured a domestic hyperscale licence with a $400m first phase, per single-source reporting still to be verified. It reads as home-grown sovereign compute ambition, building national capacity rather than importing a US or Gulf operator's campus.
Damac Digital
Damac Digital
Damac Digital keeps building toward roughly 6,000 megawatts of hyperscale capacity across 13 countries while Virginia taxes power and New York weighs a freeze. Every dollar or month of delay a US state adds is capacity a Gulf developer can site somewhere with faster permitting and no equivalent levy.
Acequia communities, Santa Fe County
Acequia communities, Santa Fe County
Santa Fe County commissioners voted unanimously on 2 July to freeze any data centre over one megawatt, citing the acequia irrigation commons that has shared scarce water since Spanish colonial rule. They expect the low threshold to draw the same Fifth Amendment challenge RCM Hill brought against Hill County, Texas.