Parties challenging the DOE (Department of Energy) Section 202(c) curtailment order, Order 202-26-06, filed a rehearing request on 28 May 2026 arguing it is "both a physical taking and a regulatory taking" of property without just compensation. The order is the same emergency authority that PJM now wields over backup-equipped data-centre generators . The petition lands at FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission), where resolution is not expected before 2027.
This challenge borrows the constitutional weapon RCM Hill aimed at Hill County the same week, but the federal facts cut the other way. A construction moratorium stops a project that never started; curtailment reaches into a running facility and orders its operator to shed load on command, which is why the petitioners frame it as a physical seizure of generating equipment, not merely a limit on use.
The counter-argument rests on a century of utility law. Section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act lets the DOE compel generation and load-shedding during a grid emergency, and courts have long treated emergency curtailment as conditional regulatory power rather than a compensable taking. DOE lawyers argue a data centre running a backup generator accepted that reliability condition the day it interconnected. Whether FERC and the courts accept the seizure framing will set the price of every future emergency order against a data centre.
