# How FERC’s Large-Load Interconnection Actions Help Address Grid Stress, Improve Affordability

> Source: <https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/ferc-large-load-interconnection/>
> Published: 2026-06-18 20:00:27+00:00

In a consequential grid infrastructure decision, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) today issued a major milestone on large-load interconnection impacting how those building AI factories, semiconductor fabrication support systems and advanced manufacturing facilities can connect to the grid.

In the era of AI, which NVIDIA founder and CEO Jensen Huang has described as a [five-layer cake](https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/ai-5-layer-cake/), energy is the critical foundation of technological innovation.

[FERC’s actions](https://www.ferc.gov/news-events/news/ferc-launches-aggressive-targeted-action-speed-large-load-integration) do more than modernize the grid interconnection queue — the approval process power developers must complete to safely connect new energy generation to the electrical grid. Following U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright’s order directing FERC to address large-load interconnection, the actions establish national policy for how America can simultaneously lower energy costs, grow its industrial base, scale AI and strengthen the electrical grid.

For policymakers, utilities and technology partners, the message is clear: This is a pro-growth, pro-affordability and pro-reliability policy.

**Faster Connections, Stronger Grid**

At its core, the new framework cuts through burdensome bureaucratic red tape and aligns industry incentives.

Large customers are no longer passive entrants into an overburdened interconnection queue. They’re active participants in building the infrastructure they require. That means:

**Funding their own network upgrades**, reducing cost pressure on existing ratepayers.** Bringing new energy generation online**, increasing supply alongside demand.** Offering flexible load**, allowing grid operators to manage peaks more efficiently.

Customers that can demonstrate flexibility — shifting or curtailing load in response to grid conditions — can move through the process on accelerated timelines, with study periods potentially as short as 60 days, per Secretary Wright’s [directive](https://www.energy.gov/articles/secretary-wright-acts-unleash-american-industry-and-innovation-newly-proposed-rules).

This is not just faster interconnection. It’s smarter interconnection.

**The Math Adds Up**

Electric grids are capital-intensive systems with high fixed costs. When more demand is added efficiently, those costs are spread across a broader base — lowering prices per unit.

The data backs this up.

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found that [every 10% increase in state electricity consumption correlates with an approximately 6-cents-per-kilowatt-hour reduction](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1040619025000612) in retail electricity prices. In other words, grid growth — when done right — lowers costs.

This dynamic is already playing out at the state level:

[North Dakota](https://ndliving.com/north-dakotas-delicate-electricity-price-balance-faces-challenges), after adding 23 data centers, saw the nation’s largest decrease in electricity prices.[Mississippi](https://www.entergy.com/blog/mississippis-proving-data-centers-dont-always-mean-higher-power-bills),[Louisiana](https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/amazon-plans-to-spend-12bn-on-louisiana-data-center-campuses-developed-by-stack-infrastructure/)and[Virginia](https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/sustainability/data-centers-electricity-bills-grid-power-amazon)moved early to attract large loads and are now seeing tangible ratepayer, grid modernization and investment benefits.[PG&E has forecast](https://www.pge.com/en/newsroom/currents/future-of-energy/the-grid-is-growing--and-that-s-good-news-for-your-bill--.html)that, under the right conditions, each new 1 gigawatt of data center load could reduce electric rates by 1-2% by spreading fixed grid costs over more usage.

Inversely, states that fail to attract new load risk concentrating system costs on a shrinking customer base — putting upward pressure on rates for households and small businesses.

FERC’s actions create a national pathway to avoid that outcome. They build on the successes of communities across North Dakota, Mississippi, Louisiana and Virginia to create a national on-ramp, enabling every region to compete for and benefit from the next wave of industrial and technological investment.

**Infrastructure That Powers the Modern Economy**

This is not abstract infrastructure. It underpins the technologies shaping the next generation of American competitiveness.

The facilities enabled by this framework will power:

**AI-driven drug discovery** that accelerates breakthroughs in medicine.**Semiconductor design and advanced manufacturing** that secure domestic supply chains.**Weather modeling and climate analytics** that improve resilience.**Next-generation energy systems** that are more adaptive and reliable.

The benefits extend beyond any single facility or industry. They can reach every American who visits a doctor, buys a product or pays an electricity bill.

**The Moment to Engage in a Decade-Defining Opportunity**

The framework is in place — but how it’s implemented, refined and scaled will depend on the stakeholders who engage now. Across government and industry, those who engage today will define what this system looks like for the next decade — how fast it grows, how resilient it becomes and how broadly its benefits are shared.

NVIDIA is not waiting.

In parallel with FERC’s action, [NVIDIA and Emerald AI](https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/news/nvidia-and-emerald-ai-join-leading-energy-companies-to-pioneer-flexible-ai-factories-as-grid-assets) are already working with partners across the ecosystem to build a new class of AI factories — designed from the ground up as flexible grid assets.

These facilities will:

- Bring their own generation to the grid
- Respond to grid conditions in real time
- Act as stabilizing forces for surrounding communities

Commercial deployment begins later this year.

This is what the future of large-load interconnection looks like: not a burden on the grid, but a backbone of reliability and efficiency.

FERC has taken an important step forward, and NVIDIA welcomes this leadership.
