New Jersey passes bill forcing large data centers to pay their own way on the power grid
The state's new tariff framework targets facilities consuming 50 MW or more, with direct implications for crypto mining and AI operations.
New Jersey just told data centers to stop freeloading on everyone else’s electric bill. Lawmakers passed bill A796/S731 on June 30, directing the state’s Board of Public Utilities to create a dedicated tariff for large-load data centers, a move designed to prevent regular ratepayers from subsidizing the massive grid upgrades these facilities demand.
The bill applies to any data center, new or existing, that consumes at least 50 MW of power. And the legislation is now sitting on Governor Mikie Sherrill’s desk, where it’s widely expected to be signed into law.
What the bill actually requires
A796/S731 changes that equation. The BPU has 12 months from the bill’s enactment to establish specific tariff standards for these facilities. Data centers subject to the tariff must commit to covering at least 85% of their requested electrical service for a minimum of 10 years. They’re also required to report performance annually, giving regulators ongoing visibility into whether these facilities are actually using what they asked for.
Earlier drafts of the legislation set the threshold at 100 MW, but amendments lowered it to 50 MW. That broader net captures a significantly larger number of facilities, including many crypto mining operations and mid-size AI training centers that might have slipped under the original bar.
The bill has been described as the most comprehensive legislation of its kind anywhere in the United States.
Why this matters for crypto and AI
New Jersey’s approach specifically addresses the need for clean energy sourcing, particularly for AI and crypto mining operations. It signals that the state isn’t just concerned about who pays for grid upgrades, but also whether these energy-hungry facilities align with broader decarbonization goals.
The 10-year commitment requirement introduces a structural rigidity that changes the risk profile of these investments. A data center operator can’t simply sign up for 50 MW, use it for two years during a crypto bull run, and then scale back. They’re locked into covering 85% of their requested capacity for a decade, a meaningful financial obligation that favors well-capitalized operators and punishes speculative builds.