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AI datacentres to strain Australia’s energy supply, spike prices without 
change, expert says

UBS analyst says tech firms must ensure datacentres have ability to power up 
and down like aluminium smelters

By Peter Hannam Wed 10 Jul 2024 
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/article/2024/jul/10/ai-datacentres-to-strain-australias-energy-supply-spike-prices-without-change-expert-says

Soaring electricity demand from datacentres could strain supplies and 
contribute to much higher prices unless tech firms agree to act like aluminium 
smelters that can power up or down to support the grid, an energy analyst says.

The demand, fuelled in part by the growth of energy-hungry artificial 
intelligence services, could require between 3.3 and 5 gigawatts of additional 
capacity by 2030, or about 15% of total load, according to Tom Allen, an 
analyst with investment bank UBS.

“We think that current government forecasts are significantly underestimating 
the load growth in demand,” Allen said.


Datacentres now account for almost a quarter of large industrial power demand 
in Australia. UBS forecasts that load will increase by 16% a year out to 2030.

Evening peak demand should send wholesale power prices as much as 70% higher by 
2030. Average prices between 3.30pm and 8.30pm have averaged $312 per 
megawatt-hour so far this year in the national energy market, and are projected 
to reach $525/MWh by the end of the decade, UBS estimates.

The Australian Energy Market Operator had so far largely missed the rise of 
datacentre demand in its forecasts, including in last month’s release of its 
biennial integrated system plan (ISP).

The next iteration of the ISP, though, “will do a better job of addressing this 
emerging and quite significant customer load,” Allen predicted.

Australia’s energy sector is facing challenges on multiple fronts as 
authorities try to manage the exit of coal-fired power plants and the rise of 
relatively low-cost renewable energy sources such as solar and wind.

Gas shortfalls are an increasing possibility in southern states, such as 
Victoria, even as the nation exports most of its gas output. The need for more 
storage has also been demonstrated lately as calm conditions have cut wind 
power output and lifted coal burning.

Electricity demand is also beginning to increase again in part because of the 
spread of electric vehicles but also datacentre expansions. A report by the 
International Energy Agency earlier this year predicted such centres consumed 
460 terawatt-hours of power in 2022, a load that could more than double to 
1000TWh by 2026.

Dylan McConnell, an energy expert from the University of NSW, said the prospect 
of rising demand from datacentres was a “bit concerning and surprising” and 
hadn’t been fully captured by traditional forecasts.

McConnell said one presentation given last year estimated datacentre load in 
Sydney alone was about 724 megawatts, with about 200MW worth of load under 
construction and a further 1 gigawatts in various states of planning.

“If you add all that up, it’s potentially two Tomagos worth of electricity 
demand,” he said, referring to an aluminium smelter near Newcastle, NSW’s 
biggest power user.

Allen said datacentres may also provide benefits to the grid, including basic 
demand that runs 24/7. On the other hand, they could shut down during periods 
of peak load in a process known as demand response and get paid for it.

“I think of datacentres as the new aluminium smelters,” he said.

However, so far, datacentres UBS has engaged with “are less interested in being 
a demand management customer” that would be paid to lower their load to support 
the grid.

An Aemo spokesperson said datacentres were “a key growth opportunity for 
electricity demand”, and their expansion was “embedded within our forecasting 
approach”. The recent ISP, for instance, anticipated such growth in a 
sensitivity analysis.

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