In a filing on Monday, AEP Ohio asked the state's public utilities commission to approve its proposals to create a new customer class and a set of tariffs specifically for data centers.
On the other hand, data centers have created roughly "less than one" full time job per megawatt of energy consumed, the filing said.
AEP Ohio's new service queue has been paused since March while the company assesses its response to the 30,000 megawatts of requests from data centers.
"We believe some of that queue is speculative, but we want the real customers and counterparties to commit to Ohio," Reitter said.
AdvertisementSome states, including Ohio, have a statute that allows power companies and data centers to seek approval for agreements that give the data centers heavily discounted electricity.
Persons:
—, Marc Reitter, Reitter, counterparties
Organizations:
Service, AEP Ohio, Business, American Electric, AEP, —, AEP Ohio's, ratepayers
Locations:
Ohio, Columbus , Ohio, New York