
Dive Brief:
- International Electric Power is planning to develop a 944-MW behind-the-meter, gas-fired plant to power a data center being developed in Greene County, Pennsylvania, according to a project partner’s Wednesday announcement. The data center will be “supplemented by battery storage and back up from an existing interconnection with the electric grid,” the companies said.
- IEP is a privately held thermal and renewable power developer. Essential Utilities, a publicly-held company, informed the Securities and Exchange Commission it would be investing $26 million in the project to develop a water treatment facility for the power plant and data center.
- Greene County Chairman Jared Edgreen told Utility Dive the county is aware of the project and sees it as “a large step forward. … We need to diversify what we have in the county,” he said. “Energy is at a premium.”
Dive Insight:
IEP is “proposing a pretty big complex,” Green County administrator Jeffrey Marshall said. He added that a lot of data centers are looking at behind-the-meter generation “versus going through the whole PJM process.”
Most of the approvals needed for the new plant will be handled at the state and federal level, Marshall said.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission in February launched a review of issues related to colocating large loads, such as data centers, at power plants in PJM’s footprint. That review is ongoing.
Meanwhile PJM has also launched a fast-track stakeholder process to develop rules for interconnecting data centers.
The announcement Wednesday focused on Essential’s investment, as well as its subsidiaries’ involvement.
Essential subsidiary Peoples is the the largest gas utility in Pennsylvania and will provide gas consulting services and energy management services to the project, the company said. Through its subsidiary Aqua, the company will build and operate a water treatment plant to service the power plant and data center, using the adjacent Monongahela River.
The partnership allows Essential to “leverage our expertise both in water and natural gas and highlights our capabilities as we work with hyperscalers to facilitate the growth of data centers,” Essential CEO and Chairman Chris Franklin said in a statement.
In another SEC filing, Essential said it has entered into agreements with IEP Hummingbird Energy LLC and International Electric Power III.
IEP, in the announcement with Essential, said it “found that the Greene County site has ample land for the data center and on-site energy generation, has plentiful access to water thanks to its location on the Monongahela River, and boasts dark fiber local to the site.”
According to the companies, their partnership “has secured the manufacturing slots” for the combined cycle gas turbines, with delivery expected in 2028. “With the initial funding and the gas turbines secured, IEP is now actively seeking investors for the next stage of the project,” they said.
“Essential’s unique expertise in water, wastewater, and natural gas makes them an ideal partner to ensure we have the power and water needed to bring this data center to life,” IEP CEO Peter Dailey said in a statement.
The Greene County project is expected to be operational in the first quarter of 2029, the companies said.