The White House presented a voluntary âRatepayer Protection Pledgeâ under which private companies commit to bear costs associated with rising electricity demand from data centers. Signatories include Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI. The pledge encourages companies to âbuild, bring, or buyâ new energy sources to offset their electricity usage and to cover infrastructure upgrades needed to meet their demand, with the stated aim of avoiding higher consumer electricity costs.
At the signing event, President Donald Trump said the pledge would allow data centers to obtain needed electricity without increasing consumer costs and stated that energy prices would âactually [be] going down.â The context includes rising retail electricity prices since 2022 and large increases in some highâdata-center areas over five years. The administration has revoked a prior greenhouse-gas harm determination, cut renewable subsidies, introduced expedited approvals for new fossil-fuel projects, and lifted environmental restrictions; its National Energy Dominance Council secured $15 billion for Mid-Atlantic and Midwest projects.
The pledge is not legally binding and includes no accountability mechanisms, timelines, or quantified requirements for added supply.