Ohio consumers’ electric bills likely to jump again as demand outstrips supply of power – Cleveland.com
COLUMBUS, Ohio — This week, for the first time, Ohio’s regional power grid operator was unable to buy enough power to meet its own reliability target.
“Electricity costs are rising, and reliability is falling because we simply do not have enough supply to meet demand,” said Shayna Fritz, executive director of the Ohio Conservative Energy Forum.
For consumers — many of whom saw electric bills spike this summer — the results point to higher costs as power supply falls behind demand.
Much of that pressure comes from the rapid build-out of data centers needed to power artificial intelligence.
That surge has also pushed new attention onto PJM’s once-obscure capacity auctions.
Twice a year, the regional grid operator asks power plants to bid on how much electricity they can provide, especially for the hottest and coldest days, when demand is highest.
December’s auction secured about 5% less than what PJM says is needed to reliably meet the biggest demand days of 2027–28.
And the price of that power hit the maximum allowed level, $333.44 per megawatt-day, pushing total capacity costs above $16 billion a year.
For context, after the 2023 auction that affected rates in 2024, the total cost of PJM’s capacity auction was about $2.2 billion.
“Data centers are being built at a pace that far outstrips the ability of the system to balance supply and demand,” Consumers for a Better Grid Campaign Manager Clara Summers said. “This auction result underscores the urgent need for reforms to ensure affordability and reliability across PJM.”
The impact on your electric bill
Capacity costs are only one part of your electric bill, but they’ve become a much bigger one in recent years.
After PJM’s capacity costs jumped from the 2023 total of $2.2 billion to $14.7 billion in the July 2024 auction (for 2025 rates), Ohio utility bills rose by an average of 10% to 15%, according to the Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council.
Those rising costs weren’t limited to Ohio.
Across PJM’s 13-state region, customers faced similar bill increases, prompting Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro to negotiate limits on how much capacity prices could rise in a single auction.
The cap applied to both of PJM’s auctions this year, and both times prices rose to the maximum allowed.
After the July 2025 auction, analysts estimated Ohio electric bills would increase by 1.5% to 5% starting in June 2026. Because December’s auction hit the same cap, a similar impact is expected.
“Without this cap, prices could have reached $500 per megawatt-day, further burdening households and businesses,” according to a statement from the Reliable Grid Project.
Shapiro’s cap expires before PJM’s next auction in June 2026, leaving the door open to even bigger increases if demand keeps outpacing supply.
Power plant owners say this reflects a rapidly changing grid, driven by the growth of data centers and AI, aging power plants coming offline, and delays in approving new energy projects.
“While customers enjoyed record low supply prices over the past decade, we are in a new era, and there will be a cost to building the projected necessary resources,” PJM Power Providers Group said in a joint statement.
The impact on reliability
In plain terms, PJM couldn’t buy enough power for 2027–28. The auction fell about 5% short of the backup capacity the grid operator uses to keep the system stable on its hottest and coldest days.
That does not mean blackouts are imminent.
PJM expects to have enough electricity to serve customers in most conditions. But the shortfall leaves the system with less cushion than planned during extreme weather.
PJM pointed to several factors that could improve the picture before 2027–28, including lower-than-expected peak demand, power plants staying online longer than planned, and additional resources that are available only in winter, when the grid is typically under the most stress.
PJM also plans to hold another auction in 2027 to try to fill the gap.
Still, grid officials said the results send a clear signal about where the pressure is coming from.
“This auction leaves no doubt that data centers’ demand for electricity continues to far outstrip new supply,” said Stu Bresler, PJM’s executive vice president for market services and strategy. “The solution will require concerted action involving PJM, its stakeholders, state and federal partners, and the data center industry itself.”
August polling from the Conservative Energy Network found 87% of voters in Ohio and Pennsylvania worried about energy affordability, while 65% were concerned about reliability.
It’s a sign that energy policy has shifted from a wonky issue to a kitchen table priority.
“This trend will continue in future capacity auctions unless immediate action is taken by policymakers to flatten the curve,” Fritz said. “When energy demand grows faster than generation, electric bills become increasingly unaffordable for Ohio families and small businesses.”
