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    Home » Meta Enters the Electricity Trading Game 
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    Meta Enters the Electricity Trading Game 

    November 23, 2025
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    Mark Zuckerberg
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    The explosive growth of artificial intelligence is reshaping not just technology but entire industries, and now it is drawing social media behemoth Meta Platforms into the unfamiliar territory of electricity trading. To hasten the development of essential new power infrastructure for its sprawling data centres, Meta has applied to US regulators for permission to buy and sell wholesale electricity. This strategic pivot aims to secure reliable, long-term energy supplies amid surging demands from AI operations, while offering a safety net to offload surplus power if market conditions shift. 

    As reported by Bloomberg, Meta’s initiative mirrors moves by fellow tech giants Microsoft, which is also pursuing federal authorisation, and Apple, which has already gained the green light to engage in power transactions. For Meta, the approval would enable firm commitments to purchase electricity from forthcoming plants, reassuring developers wary of volatile demand. Without such assurances, the pace of grid expansion lags far behind the tech sector’s voracious appetite, potentially bottlenecking AI innovation. Urvi Parekh, Meta’s global head of infrastructure energy, emphasised that developers seek tangible buy-in from major consumers to justify the multibillion-dollar investments required. 

    The stakes could scarcely be higher. AI-driven data centres are projected to consume up to 8 per cent of US electricity by 2030, more than double current levels, according to estimates from the Electric Power Research Institute. Meta alone anticipates its energy needs doubling over the next five years, fuelling a scramble for clean and reliable sources. By stepping into trading, the company could not only lock in favourable rates but also support a more dynamic wholesale market, where excess renewable generation from solar and wind farms can be redistributed efficiently. This approach aligns with Meta’s pledge to run all operations on 100 per cent renewable energy by 2030, blending fossil fuel bridges with sustainable long-term goals. 

    A stark illustration of these pressures unfolds in Louisiana, where Meta’s ambitious $10 billion data centre campus in Richland Parish demands unprecedented scale. According to the Louisiana Illuminator, utility giant Entergy Louisiana plans to deploy three natural gas-fired turbine generators delivering 2,250 megawatts – enough to power over two million homes and surpassing the annual consumption of New Orleans. This setup, approved amid local debates over subsidies and environmental impacts, underscores the interim reliance on gas for grid stability while Meta commits $1.5 billion to renewables in the state. Critics, including the Union of Concerned Scientists, warn that such projects could saddle ratepayers with hidden costs, estimated at hundreds of millions, and accelerate emissions in a region already vulnerable to climate change. 

    Yet for Meta, the calculus is clear: inaction risks derailing its AI roadmap, from enhanced content moderation to next-generation metaverse experiences. Parekh noted that proactive involvement in energy markets is essential to bridge the supply gap, lest ambitious expansions grind to a halt. As regulators deliberate – with decisions potentially months away – this foray signals a profound evolution for Silicon Valley. Tech firms, once passive power users, are emerging as market shapers, potentially catalysing a greener, more resilient grid. In an era where data is the new oil, securing its fuel demands nothing less than rewiring the power game itself.

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