According to the new rule approved by commissioners, any customers using more than 100 megawatts of energy can be billed beyond the standards of other customers.
As Georgia quickly becomes one of large companies' favorite states to build data centers in, the Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) is changing how those centers will pay for power.
The Speaker’s decision is remarkable because it follows a veto last year by Georgia Governor Brian Kemp of a bill passed by ...
Another large data center campus is being proposed outside Atlanta, Georgia. Via a Development of Regional Impact filing with ...
The state Public Service Commission (PSC) unanimously approved a rule that allows new large-load Georgia Power customers using more than 100 megawatts of electricity to be billed based on the risks ...
A developer has proposed a nine-building data center campus larger than the Mall of Georgia at a site in Newton County, east of Atlanta.
Georgia lawmakers will debate data centers' impact on energy, water, and electric rates. Critics cite strain on resources and ...
The proposed complex, which came to light in a filing Thursday, would be worth an estimated $5 billion and would go in to ...
Georgia House Speaker Jon Burns this week announced plans to develop a plan to ensure the state has enough energy and water ...
The demand for these facilities continue to grow as digital reliance, use of generative AI and web services expand.
But Chris Clark, president and CEO of the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, which urged Kemp to veto the bill, said data centers are springing up in Georgia and elsewhere because people want them. The ...