Oklahoma Law Opens New Front in AI Data Center Power Fight
Oklahoma has enacted new legislation, House Bill 2992, to protect residential utility customers from the rising electricity costs associated with large AI and hyperscale data centers. The law mandates that new, large-load customers (consuming 75 MW or more) must enter into long-term agreements to cover the infrastructure costs their projects necessitate. This move by Governor Kevin Stitt reflects a broader trend of states intervening to ensure that the significant power demands of AI infrastructure are borne by the users driving that demand, rather than by the general rate base. AI
IMPACT Accelerates a trend of states enacting regulations to manage the grid impact and costs of AI infrastructure.