2. Let America Build - Relocating the center of the co-location debate

FERC recently rejected an agreement that would have supported the expanded electricity consumption from an Amazon Web Services data center co-located at Talen Energy’s Susquehanna nuclear plant in Pennsylvania. This ruling highlights the need for more permitting and interconnection reforms. Specifically, reforms could:
- Offer faster electricity access in areas with insufficient generation and transmission capacity by addressing long transmission lead times and generation permitting and siting delays;
- Speed up backlogged interconnection queues;
- Provide more regulatory clarity, predictability, and flexibility for innovative business models and technologies seeking co-location arrangements; and
- Make rate design across customers more efficient and accurate.
What’s clear: Co-location is a symptom of a dreadfully slow construction environment that starts with five-year-long interconnection processes and is followed by uncertain transmission upgrade lead times, permitting and siting opposition, and supply chain delays. Permitting modernization efforts in Congress and additional interconnection reforms at FERC can address these challenges.
Plug in: Learn more about the interconnection process here.
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