Jigar Shah Profile picture
husband, dad, serial entrepreneur, podcaster, democratizing the electrostate by deploying at scale. It's simple, not easy.

May 10, 13 tweets

Everyone's asking: what actually powers AI data centers?

The answer is more complicated โ€” and more interesting โ€” than "natural gas vs renewables."

A ๐Ÿงต on what's really happening, and where it's going.

Start with the obvious: data centers need firm power, not really 24/7 as they run at 50% capcity factors.
Solar/Wind are fuel, batteries are really providing the capacity.

So the assumption is gas & nuclear carry the load.

Big Tech energy portfolios tell a more nuanced story.

Amazon & Microsoft: 40+ GW wind/solar each
Google & Meta: ~15 GW wind/solar each
All four signed nuclear deals as well
The nuclear numbers are smaller
In short they are sticking to their commitments to clean energy and buying NG units for "capacity" for speed to power.

The "100% renewable" claims from NVIDIA, Google, et al?
Mostly RECs โ€” Renewable Energy Credits purchased on paper.
Not physical electrons.
Google & Microsoft are moving toward stricter 24/7 carbon-free matching.
NVIDIA is still on annual accounting.
There's a gap between the headline and the actual electrons used.

Nuclear does produce power 24/7 but won't be run in a way that matches their load.
Restarting Palisade, Three Mile Island, and Duane Arnold doesn't rewrite the story.
SMRs won't meaningfully enter the mix until after 2030
So what actually fills the gap today?

Most people say gas, it is clearly sold out right now.
But we have ~600 GW of operating natural gas plants today, most of that fleet was built pre-2004.
Those older plants aren't running efficiently so they don't dispatch unless we desperately need them.
Changes everything about how you should read "gas powers data centers."

The efficiency gap is staggering:
โ†’ Modern CCGT plants (post-2014): Super efficient <7,000 Btu/kWh
โ†’ Plants from 1999โ€“2013: ~7,500 Btu/kWh
โ†’ Older simple-cycle/steam plants: >10,000 Btu/kWh
That's 30โ€“40% more fuel burned per MWh on the older kit. Normally 20GW retire per year, right now it is less than 3GW, that will catch up to everyone in 2030

New gas builds for data centers are run like peakers โ€” running 100โ€“300 hours/year, not prime power.
That means their TWh contribution is actually small.
They're reliability insurance, not bulk energy.
The electrons are still mostly coming from renewables + existing aging NG plants.

The EIA is clear on what fills incremental demand:
"primarily increased utilization of existing natural gas plants."
Not new plants.
Existing ones โ€” many of them old, inefficient, already in the dispatch queue.
Run harder, very expensive to run.

Amazon just paid $87M for empty land in Oregon:
โ†’ 1.2 GW solar capacity permitted
โ†’ 7.2 GWh battery storage
โ†’ Adjacent to an existing large datacenter
They didn't do that to ignore solar going forward. This is the 2026 design language. Very different from 2024.

Globally, 2025 was an inflection point:
"100% of all electricity demand growth in 2025 came from solar, wind, and nuclear."
The macro trend and the US near-term story are both true simultaneously.
All incremental TWh are coming from low-carbon sources.

So what's the honest summary?
โœ… Aging gas fleet (~300 GW 22+ yrs old) is doing heavy lifting inefficiently
โœ… New gas builds are mostly peakers, not prime power
โœ… Renewables/Nuclear/Batteries are 90% of what is being added globally -- including in the USA
โœ… Fleet modernization opportunity is enormous and underappreciated
This is early innings.

The least-discussed opportunity in the US energy transition:
Replace 300 GW of inefficient aging gas capacity with modern CCGTs + battery buffers + co-located solar.
The emissions & cost reduction would have a huge impact, same as 100% renewables โ€” and keep the lights on reliably. Data, not dogma. ๐Ÿ”‹โšกโ˜€๏ธ

Share this Scrolly Tale with your friends.

A Scrolly Tale is a new way to read Twitter threads with a more visually immersive experience.
Discover more beautiful Scrolly Tales like this.

Keep scrolling