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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
10JUN

xAI wins 41 gas turbines for Colossus

4 min read
10:06UTC

xAI received approval in March 2026 for 41 natural gas turbines totalling 1.2 GW to power its Colossus complex; Meta's El Paso project will run on a 366 MW behind-the-meter gas array.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

xAI, Meta and Wonder Valley are committing decades of fossil generation behind the meter to bypass the grid queue.

xAI received approval in March 2026 for 41 natural gas turbines totalling 1.2 GW to power its Colossus data centre complex outside Memphis. 1 Meta's El Paso project will run on a 366 MW behind-the-meter (BTM) natural gas array. Kevin O'Leary's Wonder Valley campus in Alberta, announced at $70 billion, has a 7.5 GW bring-your-own-power (BYOP) gas plan attached.

"behind-the-meter" describes generation built on the customer's side of the grid connection, dispatched to serve the customer's load directly without selling into the wholesale market. "Bring-your-own-power" is the operator-led variant: a campus is sited specifically to host its own generation rather than wait for transmission upgrades. Both routes solve the same problem: years-long waits for new transmission interconnection. Both also commit the operator to a fossil-fuel asset that runs for decades. A combined-cycle gas turbine ordered today comes online late in this decade and is depreciated over a twenty- to thirty-year operating life.

Colossus is xAI's Memphis training cluster, the site that hit roughly 100,000 H100 GPUs in late 2024 and was reported at 200,000 by mid-2025. Its previous power supply attracted complaints from the Southern Environmental Law Center over Clean Air Act permitting on its existing turbines. The March 2026 approval is the formal regulatory consent for the larger 1.2 GW build-out. Meta's El Paso project sits inside ERCOT, the Texas grid that has explicitly relaxed large-load interconnection rules to attract data centre demand the rest of the US grid will not connect.

The BYOP build-out runs alongside hyperscaler net-zero commitments published to investors and ESG indices. The cooling-water and renewables work covered in their sustainability reports does not retire the gas plant the same operator just queued behind the meter. Wonder Valley's 7.5 GW would meet the entire peak demand of a mid-sized European country, attached to a single private campus. Whether this gas capacity ever runs at the contracted load factor depends on how fast renewable interconnection clears, but the contracts are being signed now, and turbine lead times mean the bet is locked in.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Most buildings get their electricity from the public grid, the network of power stations and cables that delivers electricity to homes and businesses. Large data centres need so much power that getting connected to the grid can take three to five years. Behind-the-meter gas is a different approach: the operator builds its own gas-fired power stations on or next to the data centre site, generating electricity directly without ever connecting to the public grid. The gas comes from a pipeline; the turbines convert it to electricity on site. xAI, the AI company founded by Elon Musk, won approval for 41 of these turbines at its Colossus facility in Memphis, totalling 1.2 GW. Meta and Kevin O'Leary's planned Wonder Valley campus in Alberta are taking the same route. The advantage is speed: turbines can be delivered and installed in 18-24 months. The disadvantage is that they burn fossil fuel and emit carbon and local air pollutants.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Grid interconnection timelines in the US average three to five years for large industrial loads. AI data centres require power delivery on 12-18 month deployment cycles to remain competitive. The gap between what the grid can deliver and what operators require has made BTM gas economically rational even at the cost of higher per-MWh fuel prices, permitting complexity, and reputational risk.

The secondary cause is the GE Vernova backlog: gas turbines are deliverable within 18-24 months (subject to queue position), whereas new grid connections in congested areas are not. Equipment manufacturers have pulled forward delivery capacity that transmission planners cannot match.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The IEA's 15-27 GW US onsite gas projection by 2030 is now on track to be achieved early: xAI alone accounts for 1.2 GW, Meta El Paso for 0.37 GW, and Wonder Valley (if built) for 7.5 GW.

    Medium term · Medium
  • Risk

    Memphis's minor modification permitting pathway for 41 turbines is now the subject of EPA regional scrutiny; if challenged successfully, it could invalidate the approval and strand capital already committed.

    Short term · Medium
  • Precedent

    Three major BTM gas commitments in a single quarter establishes BTM self-generation as the default model for AI campuses above 300 MW, which will shape utility planning and grid investment models for the next decade.

    Long term · High
First Reported In

Update #1 · Boom hits wall: grid says no, states freeze

Data Center Frontier· 26 Apr 2026
Read original
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.