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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
10JUN

DOE curtailment order faces taking claim

3 min read
10:06UTC

Parties challenging the DOE's Section 202(c) curtailment order filed a rehearing on 28 May, calling it a physical and regulatory taking of property without compensation.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

The DOE 202(c) rehearing tests whether emergency curtailment counts as a compensable seizure of property.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US Department of Energy has the power, under a law called Section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act, to order certain large electricity users to cut their power use during a grid emergency, like an extreme heat event. In May 2026, DOE used this law to allow PJM, the grid operator, to switch off backup generators at data centres if needed. Now, the companies affected are arguing that this is unconstitutional. They say the government is effectively taking their property, the backup generators they own, without paying them compensation. Under the US Constitution's Fifth Amendment, the government must pay fair value when it takes private property. The same constitutional argument appears in the Hill County case {{EVREF:/t/data-centres/2/twinsburg-and-ypsilanti-use-utility-hookup-denial/}}, making this a coordinated legal challenge across two different levels of government.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act predates the data-centre era by nearly 90 years and was written for fuel-supply and physical-plant emergencies affecting public utilities. It grants the Secretary of Energy authority to order temporary generation and load-curtailment measures during a reliability emergency, but its legislative history contains no reference to private commercial buildings, behind-the-meter backup generation, or AI compute loads.

The absence of a settled statutory framework for managing large dispatchable private loads, precisely the gap that FERC's Docket RM26-4-000 is meant to close, forces the DOE to use emergency authority as a workaround.

The taking challenge will not resolve before 2027 because it depends on FERC's RM26-4-000 rulemaking establishing the permanent framework. Until that rule sets what obligations data-centre operators carry as a condition of grid connection, every 202(c) order is litigable as either an overstep of emergency authority or a regulatory taking of property that was never explicitly made subject to grid-control conditions in the first place.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A court ruling that repeated use of Section 202(c) for a structural load-management problem violates procedural requirements would force the DOE to pursue notice-and-comment rulemaking, removing emergency curtailment as a tool until a formal rule is in place, potentially through 2028.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    If the taking theory survives threshold review and reaches a damages assessment, it would set a price for all future grid emergency curtailments applied to private commercial buildings, changing the risk calculus for every future DOE 202(c) order.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    Uncertainty over curtailment authority accelerates data-centre operators' investment in physical islanding, where a campus generates and stores its own power and reduces reliance on grid-connected backup, to remove the regulatory handle DOE is using.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Who pays when the grid bends for AI

PJM Interconnection· 2 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
Data-centre developers and hyperscale operators
Data-centre developers and hyperscale operators
Hill County's rescission on 4 June, seven days after RCM Hill filed a $100 million taking suit, shows the Fifth Amendment threat is faster than any appellate route: the damages clock runs from the day the moratorium passed. Rural counties with no large-load permitting framework face a litigation bill that can exceed their entire annual budget.
Kenya and President Ruto
Kenya and President Ruto
Kenya's suspension of the $1 billion Microsoft-G42 Olkaria project in early May applies raw-capacity logic at national scale: President Ruto stated the full 1 GW build would mean switching off half the country against a 3 GW installed base. A single hyperscale campus can consume a third of a Sub-Saharan grid with no equivalent constraint in Europe.
Denmark and Energinet
Denmark and Energinet
Energinet's 27 May extension of its large-load connection pause, with a 60 GW queue against 7 GW peak demand, demolishes the assumption that surplus renewable generation is a relief valve for compute demand. Denmark has more wind than it can use and still cannot connect data centres, because transmission pace is the binding constraint.
France and EDF
France and EDF
EDF's repurposing of the Bouchain former power-station site for SoftBank's Phase 1 campus gives France a replicable siting instrument, a brownfield nuclear connection bypass, that no other G7 grid operator can match. France's Choose France summit on 30 May secured the boom's largest European bet without a connection-queue fight or community moratorium.
SoftBank Group
SoftBank Group
SoftBank's EUR 75 billion France commitment on 30 May anchors at EDF's Bouchain nuclear baseload, bypassing the UK's four-times-US electricity cost premium (cited by OpenAI as reason to pause Cobalt Park) and Germany's grid-queue delays. EDF's supply relationship is bilateral; SoftBank never enters the French connection queue.
US residential ratepayers and state regulators
US residential ratepayers and state regulators
Portland General Electric's 4 June tariff is the first evidence that PJM's cost-transfer warning to governors on 19 May can run in reverse: Oregon households get a 1.3% bill reduction as data centres absorb their grid costs. The 12 other states carrying active cost-attribution bills now have a filed tariff with actual numbers to cite.