Alan Ambrose Posted Friday at 09:47 Posted Friday at 09:47 Yes, the US, but not unreasonable to think we might face the same potential problem here due to datacentres gobbling power: An electricity crunch is driving high bills in these states. It’s not getting better anytime soon https://edition.cnn.com/2025/12/22/climate/high-electricity-bills-maryland-new-jersey-pennsylvania?iid=cnn_buildContentRecirc_end_recirc&recs_exp=up-next-article-end&tenant_id=related.en
JohnMo Posted Friday at 10:01 Posted Friday at 10:01 Read an article the other day saying electric prices in the UK are set to drop like a stone. As our price is directly linked to gas wholesale prices, which due to the glut of LNG on the world market is falling, and due to fall even further. Several countries are reducing their uptake of LNG due to more renewables coming stream and less reliance on imported gas.
SteamyTea Posted Friday at 10:03 Posted Friday at 10:03 Maybe they need to install some more capacity. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_electricity_production
SteamyTea Posted Friday at 11:01 Posted Friday at 11:01 A few minutes looking at the data and it shows a messy picture. But generally, the trend is that the more RE generation there is (less fossil fuels) the cheaper the kWh price is in the USA. It is messy because of the different stages each state is in implimentaion, amount imported from neighbours, and climatic differences.
Roger440 Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago On 26/12/2025 at 10:01, JohnMo said: Read an article the other day saying electric prices in the UK are set to drop like a stone. As our price is directly linked to gas wholesale prices, which due to the glut of LNG on the world market is falling, and due to fall even further. Several countries are reducing their uptake of LNG due to more renewables coming stream and less reliance on imported gas. Id bet good money that they dont though. 1
JohnMo Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Roger440 said: Id bet good money that they dont though. I wouldn't bet against you. Low gas prices really mean more profits for big corporate entities, not much passed on to the man on the street. 1
SteamyTea Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 19 minutes ago, JohnMo said: not much passed on to the man on the street. Isn't OFGEM meant to put a cap on it on predicted future prices (they are not really predicted as they are forward contracts as far as I know).
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