# US government to fast-track grid connections for AI data centers

> Source: <https://cryptobriefing.com/us-fast-track-grid-ai-data-centers/>
> Published: 2026-06-18 15:21:28+00:00

# US government to fast-track grid connections for AI data centers

FERC plans to cut approval timelines to 60 days as AI electricity demand overwhelms the existing interconnection queue

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced plans on June 18, 2026, to expedite grid connection approvals for AI data centers. The move acknowledges what everyone in the energy sector already knows: the current system for plugging massive facilities into the US power grid is painfully slow, and AI’s appetite for electricity isn’t waiting around.

Building a cutting-edge data center is expensive and time-consuming. But actually connecting it to the grid has been the real bottleneck. Multi-year interconnection queues have turned what should be a bureaucratic formality into a strategic chokepoint for the entire AI industry.

## What FERC is actually proposing

The commission’s proposals include standardized procedures designed to replace the current patchwork of regional rules. For flexible or curtailable loads, meaning facilities that can dial their consumption up or down on demand, approval timelines could shrink to as short as 60 days.

FERC is also proposing colocation options with generating facilities. In plain English: data centers could set up shop right next to power plants, sidestepping much of the transmission infrastructure that creates delays in the first place.

Energy Secretary Chris Wright issued a directive on October 23, 2025, calling for immediate rulemaking to facilitate timely interconnection of large electric loads, generally defined as those exceeding 20 megawatts. For context, 20 MW is roughly enough to power about 15,000 homes. A single hyperscale data center can consume many times that.

## Regional operators are already moving

On June 10, 2026, FERC approved PJM’s expedited interconnection track. PJM operates the largest competitive wholesale electricity market in the US, covering all or parts of 13 states and the District of Columbia.

Texas has its own parallel effort underway. ERCOT, the state’s independent grid operator, has been evaluating proposals to streamline connections for energy-intensive facilities. Texas regulators were expected to vote on those proposals around June 17–18, 2026.

Senator Cynthia Lummis proposed the POWER Up Act, which aims to place data center grid connections under federal oversight.

## What this means for crypto and energy markets

No specific crypto tokens are directly tied to these regulatory changes. Data centers don’t just serve AI workloads — they host cloud computing, enterprise applications, and crypto mining operations. The same grid infrastructure that FERC is trying to fast-track for AI will inevitably serve as the backbone for Bitcoin mining facilities and other energy-intensive digital asset operations.

FERC’s 60-day timeline for flexible loads includes an important qualifier: these facilities must be willing to curtail their consumption when the grid is stressed.

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