HomeNewsOpinionThe AI revolution needs chips, software — and gas pipelines

The AI revolution needs chips, software — and gas pipelines

Despite continued expansion of renewable and battery capacity, Texas recorded surprisingly strong electricity prices last summer and futures have also soared over the past six months. The reason? A massive expansion in power consumption offsetting the new generating capacity. Assuming the AI revolution is in its infancy, we are about to witness a marked increase in demand for electricity, and gas will play a part in meeting that

March 13, 2024 / 13:38 IST
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Assuming the AI revolution is in its infancy, we are about to witness a marked increase in demand for electricity across large parts of the US, and gas will play a part in meeting that.

The fervour for all things AI has finally spread to a sector whose own heady start-up phase came about 160 years ago: Pipelines.

EQT Corp., a natural gas producer, announced this week the surprise $5.5 billion acquisition of Equitrans Midstream Corp, a pipeline business it spun out only six years ago. EQT justified this mainly in terms of cost and hedging synergies, which matter when gas prices are sub-$2 per million BTU.

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One interesting addendum from Chief Executive Toby Rice on the analyst call concerned something a bit more 21st-century, however:
Another interesting dynamic that we are seeing in that market, is just the growth in power gen ... That's specifically taking place in the Southeastern market that MVP serves, and then throw on top of that, the power demand from AI, which MVP is servicing in data center alley, and it's going to create even more opportunity.

“MVP” is the Mountain Valley Pipeline, a long-delayed project to bring Appalachian gas to market that was eventually forced through by Congressional fiat. EQT will own about 49 percent of MVP and operate it, with start-up expected soon.