U.S. Department of Energy Warns Risk of Blackouts Is Rising

The U.S. Department of Energy has warned that blackouts could increase substantially in the coming years unless more baseload capacity is added to the grid.

The department issued its warning in a report that said the premature retirement of generation capacity and the delay in replacing that capacity with new baseload facilities had created a mismatch between demand and supply. This mismatch has increased the risk of a potential twofold increase in blackouts by 2030.

“This report affirms what we already know: The United States cannot afford to continue down the unstable and dangerous path of energy subtraction previous leaders pursued, forcing the closure of baseload power sources like coal and natural gas,” Energy Secretary Chris Wright said.

“In the coming years, America’s reindustrialization and the AI race will require a significantly larger supply of around-the-clock, reliable, and uninterrupted power,” Wright added, saying the Trump administration would ensure that supply by focusing on “all forms of energy that are affordable, reliable, and secure.”

The North American Reliability Corp. has been warning of blackouts for two years now, citing extreme temperatures but also increased reliance on weather-dependent sources of electricity, notably wind and solar installations. The latest warning came earlier this year, with NERC attributing the danger to the surge in demand for electricity. The surge, in turn, was driven by the proliferation of data centers, which consume enormous amounts of electricity.

Meanwhile, a proliferation in wind and solar capacity has made the grid less stable and electricity supply less reliable, the grid watchdog said.

“With higher demand and less firm resources,” NERC said in June, the grid “is at elevated risk of operating reserve shortfalls during periods of high demand or low resource output.”

The current management of the DoE expects new capacity additions of some 209 GW by 2030, replacing 104 GW of retired capacity. However, just 22 GW of that 104 GW will come from baseload facilities, which is too little to ensure grid stability, the DoE said.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Chinese Grid Operators Resist Plans to Boost Renewables to Power AI

    Grid operators are concerned that the Chinese drive to hike the share of renewable electricity powering AI would raise the risks for power firms as peak demand at data centers…

    Heatwave, Hormuz Threats and Qatar Blast Push European Gas Prices Higher

    Europe’s benchmark natural gas prices rose by nearly 2% on Monday morning in Amsterdam as a heatwave in Europe is raising short-term power demand and the U.S.-Iran talks continue amid…

    Have You Seen?

    ExxonMobil Announces Planned Effective Date for Move to Texas

    • June 23, 2026
    ExxonMobil Announces Planned Effective Date for Move to Texas

    Oil Stocks in US Strategic Petroleum Reserve Fall to Lowest Since 1983

    • June 23, 2026
    Oil Stocks in US Strategic Petroleum Reserve Fall to Lowest Since 1983

    US Proposes to Slash Costs for Energy Drillers on Federal Lands

    • June 23, 2026
    US Proposes to Slash Costs for Energy Drillers on Federal Lands

    Oil Settles Down More 3% After US-Iran Talks Signal Easing Supply Risks

    • June 23, 2026
    Oil Settles Down More 3% After US-Iran Talks Signal Easing Supply Risks

    Heatwave, Hormuz Threats and Qatar Blast Push European Gas Prices Higher

    • June 22, 2026
    Heatwave, Hormuz Threats and Qatar Blast Push European Gas Prices Higher

    Chinese Grid Operators Resist Plans to Boost Renewables to Power AI

    • June 22, 2026
    Chinese Grid Operators Resist Plans to Boost Renewables to Power AI

    Talks Between Iran and US Concluded Successfully, Pakistan PM Says

    • June 22, 2026
    Talks Between Iran and US Concluded Successfully, Pakistan PM Says

    Iran Gets Oil Trading Respite from US

    • June 22, 2026
    Iran Gets Oil Trading Respite from US

    Big Business Urges Faster Electrification

    • June 22, 2026
    Big Business Urges Faster Electrification

    Analysts Warn China’s Oil Demand May Never Fully Recover

    • June 22, 2026
    Analysts Warn China’s Oil Demand May Never Fully Recover