Residential electricity prices have surged 36% since 2020, reaching 17.44 cents per kilowatt-hour by February 2026 and projected to hit 19.01 cents per kilowatt-hour by September 2027 [1]. This pricing pressure coincides with accelerating AI infrastructure investment, as Anthropic enters talks with Blackstone and other private equity firms to form a joint venture embedding AI across their portfolio companies [5]. The semiconductor substrate market supporting this expansion could grow from $1 billion in 2025 to $4.4 billion by 2036, driven by glass substrate adoption for AI chips [3]. Meanwhile, the Pentagon is reshaping AI procurement policy by ditching existing suppliers, creating market disruption that affects enterprise adoption patterns across sectors [4].
Grid infrastructure is responding to these demand pressures with rapid storage deployment. Arizona more than doubled its utility-scale battery capacity to 4.7 gigawatts by the end of 2025, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration data [2]. This storage buildout supports both renewable integration and the grid stability required for data center operations, creating potential synergies between AI infrastructure investment and utility-scale storage platforms. The private equity consolidation model emerging through the Anthropic-Blackstone discussions could accelerate this convergence by standardizing AI deployment across hundreds of portfolio companies simultaneously.
Geopolitical risks add complexity to these infrastructure investments, as the Iran conflict creates what the International Energy Agency calls "the largest supply disruption" in oil market history, costing the U.S. $11 billion thus far [6]. Energy security concerns may accelerate domestic power generation and storage investments, potentially benefiting the utility-scale projects and grid infrastructure supporting AI data center expansion.