Georgia Power to let customers build their own clean energy projects

Georgia Power, the state's largest utility, has approved a new program allowing companies to propose and fund their own clean energy projects. The Customer-Identified Resource program received bipartisan support from public service commissioners on April 7 and is set to launch this summer. Supporters see it as a way to meet rising energy demands with renewables rather than natural gas.

Georgia's public service commissioners approved the program with bipartisan backing, enabling Georgia Power customers to identify and develop clean energy initiatives directly on the utility's grid. Previously, companies like Meta built solar fields in Georgia for a data center in Social Circle served by an electric membership cooperative, while Hyundai purchased renewable energy credits from Texas solar for its plant near Savannah. Under the new rules, customers can fund projects overlooked in the utility's standard bidding or create their own within the state.  Priya Barua, senior director of Utility Partnerships and Innovation at the Corporate Energy Buyers Association, highlighted the program's innovation. “It provides an opportunity for the first time for these customers to be able to identify and bring projects to Georgia Power,” she said. The initiative also permits multiple customers to collaborate, broadening access for small and medium-sized commercial and industrial users.  Georgia ranks eighth nationally in solar capacity, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. Amid growing demand, particularly from data centers, Georgia Power plans significant new natural gas generation. Barua noted the program could accelerate clean energy additions, potentially reducing reliance on fossil fuels. “It just accelerates the clean energy projects coming to the system, which would then negate the need for natural gas and other types of generation resources down the road,” she said.  Advocates hope the model spreads to other utilities balancing energy needs and climate goals.

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Tesla Cybertruck in Texas sending power back to the grid via Powershare program, owner earning bill credits on smartphone app.
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Tesla launches Cybertruck V2G program in Texas

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Tesla has introduced the Powershare Grid Support program, enabling eligible Cybertruck owners in select Texas markets to send energy back to the grid during high-demand events and earn bill credits. The initiative, announced on social media platform X, builds on the vehicle's existing bidirectional charging capabilities. Expansion to California is planned soon.

A new report from the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy argues that greater energy efficiency and load shifting can address rising U.S. electricity needs without extensive new power plants. These demand-side measures could cut costs in half and reduce emissions. Utilities and governments are urged to prioritize such strategies amid surging demand.

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Tesla, Google, and Carrier have formed the Utilize coalition with other companies to improve U.S. power grid utilization and potentially save consumers over $100 billion in the next decade. The group highlights that the grid operates at only 53% capacity on average, leading to higher electricity costs. Founding members aim to advocate for policies that unlock idle capacity through technologies like battery storage and virtual power plants.

Ethiopian firm Eden Power has partnered with China's Southern Power Grid Technology to create a green technology hub, aiming to boost local manufacturing and job creation in the energy sector.

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Across the United States, Republican and Democratic lawmakers are aligning to regulate artificial intelligence and the energy-intensive data centers that power it, driven by concerns over electricity costs and resource use. President Trump has joined the push by urging tech companies to build their own power plants. This unusual cooperation contrasts with federal gridlock and reflects voter frustrations ahead of midterms.

The United States installed a record amount of energy storage capacity in 2025, according to a solar industry report. This milestone advances clean energy infrastructure amid policy challenges from the second Trump administration, as utilities adapt grids to surging electricity demand.

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On March 4, 2026, leading tech firms including Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI signed the non-binding Ratepayer Protection Pledge at the White House, committing to fund new power generation and infrastructure for AI data centers to shield consumers from rising electricity bills. President Trump hailed it as a 'historic win,' but critics question its enforceability amid growing environmental and economic concerns.

 

 

 

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