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Energy Gang

How US utilities are adapting to a high-growth world for power demand. The head of America's largest electricity industry group explains the critical role played by regulators

Energy Gang

Wood Mackenzie

Tech News, Environment, Sustainability, Innovation, Renewable Energy, Technology, Alternative Energy, Energy, News, Cleantech, Wind Energy, Business, Climate Change, Solar Energy

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 19 May 2026

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The era of stagnant electricity demand in the US is over. Data centres, electrification, and reshoring of manufacturing are driving a surge in demand that is stronger that anything that anyone currently working in the industry has yet seen in their professional lifetimes. The question of which market and regulatory structures are needed to respond to this new and fast-changing world is now at the centre of the policy debate.

Host Ed Crooks is joined by Drew Maloney, President and CEO of the Edison Electric Institute, the trade body representing America's investor-owned utilities, which together serve more than 70 per cent of the US population. Drew argues that the current moment is exposing a fundamental divide in the US power system: vertically integrated, regulated utilities can plan generation, transmission, and distribution over 20-year horizons, while competitive markets like PJM are struggling to send the investment signals needed to get new power plants built.

The conversation starts with one of the hottest topics in US politics: affordability and household electricity bills. There are some misconceptions about electricity bills that have gained traction with the American public. Drew points to EEI research showing that 34 states have kept increases in electricity rates below general consumer price inflation over the past five years. And he adds that the states where prices are rising fastest tend to be in deregulated markets, where capacity costs are climbing but no new generation is being built.

Ed draws on the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's 2025 study of electricity bills and data centres (You can read that study here.). That study found that demand growth alone did not explain rising bills, and that the drivers vary significantly by region, from wildfire mitigation costs in California to capacity market dynamics in PJM and New England.

They move on to another hot topic in the industry today: whether data centres and other large loads should go “off grid” and rely entirely on local on-site generation. Drew pushes back against the narrative that this model is now becoming widespread, arguing there is more talk than action. Building duplicative generation to create “five nines” reliability for a data centre is expensive, and can still be unreliable without grid backup. It also pulls investment and workforce away from the shared infrastructure that benefits all customers. 

Most data centres want grid access, even if some are pursuing hybrid approaches in the interim until their hook-ups to the network can be connected.

The episode also covers FERC Chairman Laura Swett's emerging approach to market intervention, the prospects for bipartisan permitting reform in Congress, and the ratepayer protection plan brokered between the White House and the major hyperscalers. Drew closes with an optimistic long view: the current moment, though it needs careful management, could be an opportunity to transform the US grid for the better.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Look, I think that PJM is going to be really the poster child example of a broken market.

0:07.7

And the customers that are in PJM are the one suffering.

0:12.2

It's easy to go to the White House and agree a statement and say, we want reliability at low cost.

0:18.3

Actually making that happen and implementing that in detail, that's much harder.

0:23.8

Our members represent about 5% of the economy, but it's the first 5%.

0:28.7

And if that first 5% isn't delivering the power, the economy doesn't work.

0:34.2

At the end of the day, we still need more generation.

0:38.8

And we're not going to be able to tech our way out of more generation.

0:48.2

Electricity use is on the rise across the country, and America's electric companies are rising

0:52.5

to the challenge.

0:53.9

Governed by clear standards, accountable to their communities and committed to their customers,

0:58.2

America's electric companies continue to meet the energy demands of today while strengthening

1:02.3

the grid for the needs of tomorrow.

1:04.4

So we can all stay safe, comfortable and connected, day in and day out.

1:08.9

America's electric companies, powering the energy of every day.

1:12.4

Learn more at Energyof Everyday.com.

1:15.2

This message is sponsored by the Edison Electric Institute.

1:21.4

Hello and welcome to The Energy Gang, a discussion show from Wood McKenzie about the fast-changing

1:30.0

world of energy. I'm Ed Crooks. And on this special show, we're going to be talking about the

1:34.2

US power industry, the challenges it faces, and some of the possible solutions. And to do that,

1:39.4

I'm joined by Drew Maloney, who is the president and chief executive of the industry group, the

1:43.6

Edison Electric Institute, the EEI, as it's generally known. Hello, Drew, who is the president and chief executive of the industry group, the Edison Electric

...

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