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As thousands of industry professionals walked around DTECH in San Diego a couple of weeks ago, the atmosphere was different than usual. Usually, these events focus on the next big battery or a shiny new turbine. But this year, the hottest discussions were about something practical: we are running out of space on our power lines.
If you've been examining your company's planning maps, you know what I mean. We're seeing massive AI data centers rising like mushrooms, all urgently demanding power. Meanwhile, wind and solar projects face years-long delays. For decades, our industry was based on a simple idea: if you need power, build lines. But constructing a new transmission line today is a ten-year ordeal. Due to permitting, land rights, and material costs, we cannot build our way out of this quickly.
By Vedeni Energy, LLCAs thousands of industry professionals walked around DTECH in San Diego a couple of weeks ago, the atmosphere was different than usual. Usually, these events focus on the next big battery or a shiny new turbine. But this year, the hottest discussions were about something practical: we are running out of space on our power lines.
If you've been examining your company's planning maps, you know what I mean. We're seeing massive AI data centers rising like mushrooms, all urgently demanding power. Meanwhile, wind and solar projects face years-long delays. For decades, our industry was based on a simple idea: if you need power, build lines. But constructing a new transmission line today is a ten-year ordeal. Due to permitting, land rights, and material costs, we cannot build our way out of this quickly.