Elizabeth Warren proposes taxing AI companies to benefit all Americans Senator Elizabeth Warren proposed a new excise tax on energy consumption by AI companies and large data centers to fund worker protections, universal health care, and education. The Massachusetts Democrat named billionaires Jeff Bezos and Sam Altman as beneficiaries of an untaxed AI boom, citing electricity cost surges of up to 267% in some communities driven by data center power demands. Elizabeth Warren proposes taxing AI companies to benefit all Americans The senator's plan targets data center energy consumption with an excise tax, names billionaires like Bezos and Altman as beneficiaries of an untaxed AI boom, and could have indirect consequences for crypto-adjacent AI projects. Senator Elizabeth Warren wants AI companies to start paying what she considers their fair share. In a Time op-ed published May 27, the Massachusetts Democrat laid out a proposal for new taxes on AI companies and large data centers, including an excise tax on their energy consumption scaled to the size of their operations. The revenue, Warren argues, should fund worker protections, universal health care, education, and unemployment insurance. The proposal: what Warren actually wants The centerpiece is what Warren calls a “reasonable” excise tax on energy consumption by data centers. The tax would be calibrated to the scale of operations, meaning the trillion-dollar players would shoulder the heaviest burden. Warren specifically named Jeff Bezos and Sam Altman as billionaires who have profited enormously from the AI boom. This isn’t her first rodeo on wealth taxation. Back in 2019, Warren proposed a 2% annual tax on net worth exceeding $50 million, with the rate climbing to 6% for fortunes above $1 billion. The AI-specific proposal builds on that same philosophical foundation but narrows its focus to the energy-hungry infrastructure powering the current tech wave. One data point she cited is striking: electricity costs in some communities have surged by as much as 267% over the past five years, driven in large part by the power demands of data centers. Warren also called for broader corporate tax reforms, including higher rates on corporate taxes and capital gains. “Building an economy that works for all of us will require multiple policy responses.” Why crypto should be paying attention Warren’s op-ed makes no direct reference to cryptocurrencies or digital assets. But if policymakers start treating energy-intensive compute as a taxable externality, similar logic could be applied to proof-of-work mining or other energy-heavy crypto operations. Warren has already been one of crypto’s most vocal critics on regulatory issues. What this means for investors The 267% electricity cost increase Warren cited highlights an underappreciated risk for anyone investing in compute-intensive sectors. Energy costs are becoming a material factor in the profitability of AI operations, data centers, and crypto mining alike. Investors holding AI tokens or stocks in companies with significant data center exposure should be modeling scenarios where operating costs rise meaningfully, either through taxation or through raw energy price inflation. The companies and protocols best positioned are those with energy-efficient architectures or access to cheap, renewable power sources. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .