Trenton, NJ — New Jersey lawmakers are moving to shield residents from rising electric bills as energy-hungry AI data centers and other massive power users expand, advancing a bill that would force those operations to pay their full share of grid costs. Senate Bill 731, now backed by the Senate Economic Growth Committee, aims to stop what officials describe as a growing risk: large-scale facilities draining the power grid while shifting financial burdens onto everyday customers.
The proposal comes as demand from high-capacity users—particularly data centers tied to artificial intelligence—continues to surge, raising concerns about infrastructure strain and who ultimately pays for it.
Utilities required to create new pricing structure
The bill would require every electric utility in New Jersey to create a special rate structure, or tariff, for “large load customers”—defined as facilities using more than 100 megawatts of power monthly.
Under the legislation, those tariffs must:
- Ensure large users cover all costs tied to their service
- Prevent other customers from subsidizing their energy use
- Protect the grid from financial risk if projects fail or shut down
Utilities would be required to apply the new rates within one year of the law taking effect.
Financial guarantees and long-term commitments
To further protect ratepayers, the bill allows regulators to require large customers to guarantee payment for at least 85% of their expected energy use over a minimum of 10 years.
That provision targets a key concern: that large, speculative developments—such as AI-driven data centers—could leave behind “stranded costs” if they scale back or abandon operations after utilities have already invested in infrastructure upgrades.
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Key Points
• NJ bill targets large energy users like AI data centers to prevent cost shifting
• Requires utilities to create special tariffs for customers using 100+ megawatts
• Includes 10-year financial guarantees to protect ratepayers
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Broader push beyond just data centers
Originally focused on data centers, lawmakers expanded the bill to cover all large energy users, reflecting concerns that multiple industries—not just tech—could strain the grid.
Still, AI infrastructure remains a central focus, as the rapid growth of computing demand has driven energy consumption to unprecedented levels nationwide.
Why it matters
Without changes, lawmakers warn that the cost of upgrading infrastructure to support these massive facilities could fall on residential and small business customers—effectively subsidizing billion-dollar operations.
The bill seeks to reverse that dynamic by ensuring those driving demand also bear the financial responsibility.
What happens next
The legislation now moves forward in the state Legislature, where it could face further revisions before a full vote.
If enacted, utilities and regulators would begin developing the new rate structures, marking a significant shift in how New Jersey manages the rising energy demands of the AI era.