Donāt count on lower electricity prices in 2026
- - Donāt count on lower electricity prices in 2026
Lauren JessopDecember 25, 2025 at 9:42 PM
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A smart thermostat displays a homeās temperature setting. Photo: Dan LeFebvre / Unsplash
(The Center Square) ā For 67 million people relying on electricity from the regional power grid, PJM, cheaper utility bills in 2026 are little more than a pipe dream.
Itās not an unexpected blow, despite moves from the Trump administration and state regulators to keep prices in check. Why? Because thereās simply not enough power generation ā from gas and nuclear plants, wind and solar farms and battery storage reserves ā to feed the grid.
PJMās latest capacity auction, which determines power supply for the coming year, reveals rapidly rising load forecasts, primarily driven by AI-powered data centers, meaning residents across the mid-Atlantic, Washington D.C., and parts of the Midwest will pay more for a less reliable grid.
In its report on the 2027-2028 Base Residual Auction, PJM said it secured 134,479 MW of unforced capacity generation at $333.44/MW-day ā an increase of 1.3% over the prior year.
That leaves the grid 6,623 MW short, which is enough supply to power roughly 6.6 million homes. Stu Bresler, PJMās incoming chief operating officer, said customers in its territory shouldnāt assume the worst, pointing to sufficient reserves to cover a āonce-in-10-yearā event.
The term describes an industry-wide reliability standard that requires power grid operators to secure enough supply to limit blackouts to once every decade. However, itās not a guarantee due to unpredictable weather or market conditions.
āBut this auction leaves no doubt that data centersā demand for electricity continues to far outstrip new supply, and the solution will require concerted action involving PJM, its stakeholders, state and federal partners, and the data center industry itself,ā Bresler said.
PJM said its peak load forecast is approximately 5,250 MW higher than in the 2026-2027 capacity auction, with nearly 5,100 MW of that increase attributable to data center demand. The cleared resource mix includes 43% natural gas, 21% nuclear, 20% coal, 5% demand response, 4% hydro, 2% wind, 2% oil and 1% solar.
A joint statement from the Electric Power Supply Association and PJM Power Providers Group warned that customers enjoyed record low supply prices over the last decade, however, a new era has dawned and there is a cost to building the projected necessary resources on the timeline required.
They remain focused, it says, on meaningful and cost-effective solutions to meet the moment: removing non-market barriers to development, such as permitting and siting roadblocks, to help bring needed resources online, addressing supply chain constraints, and providing regulatory certainty for investors.
Itās top-of-mind for state officials too, from Gov. Josh Shapiro to legislative champions of continued energy investment, like Republican Sen. Gene Yaw, who chairs the chamberās Environmental Resources and Energy Committee.
Shapiro, in the wake of the auction results, reiterated his role in forcing PJM to change a price cap that kept increases from skyrocketing further through a complaint to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission earlier this year.
āI sued PJM because it is unacceptable for them to do nothing as consumers pay sky-high utility bills while getting nothing in return,ā Shapiro said in a statement. āMy Administration has once again stopped billions of dollars in unnecessary and unjustified energy price hikes from being passed on to families and businesses.ā
Heās also been on the record about pulling the commonwealth out of the grid if reforms arenāt adopted to speed up project development. Doing so would be unprecedented.
Pennsylvania, the āPā in PJM, was apart of the grid from its conception more than a century ago, and it generates 25% of the energy that powers the system. According to the P3 Group, roughly 80% of the new generation planned to increase supply in coming the years will be built in the commonwealth.
āPJM needs real reform and they are running out of time to protect consumers from their inaction,ā Shapiro said. āMy Administration will continue to build more energy generation right here in the Commonwealth and push PJM to fix its broken process so we can lower costs, strengthen reliability, and keep more money in the pockets of Pennsylvanians.ā
Yaw called the governorās threats āimpressiveā and āmisguided,ā noting that PJM is powerless to change state policies that focus on climate action targets and are outpaced by growing demand.
āItās a traffic controller for the grid, not the driver of energy costs,ā he said. āThe real reason electricity prices are rising is because weāre not producing enough of it. Over the past decade, aggressive renewable mandates have forced the premature retirement of dependable baseload generation without replacing it with sufficient new baseload generation capacity. Thatās not PJMās fault. Thatās a policy failure.ā
He added that āregulatory reshufflingā wonāt convince developers to build 67,000 MW renewable energy projects āsitting on the sidelines.ā
āMaking PJM the boogeyman is good short-term politics. Artificially and temporarily capping electric rates stifles new generation and sends the message: donāt build in the PJM grid,ā Yaw said. āThat is disastrous for Pennsylvanians in the long term. As Iāve said before, if Pennsylvania is serious about protecting consumers, we must stop pointing fingers and start investing in real solutions.ā
Christen Smith contributed to this report.
Source: āAOL Breakingā