Joey Politano delivers a startling reality check: America's electricity gap isn't a future problem—it's a present crisis driving prices up and forcing the grid to rely on aging coal plants while solar and batteries race to catch up. The most striking claim isn't just that demand is surging, but that the very policies designed to slow renewable growth have failed to stop it, revealing a market momentum that no amount of regulatory friction can easily derail.
The Demand Shock
The core of the argument rests on a fundamental shift in American energy consumption. Politano writes, "US power consumption has risen more in the last two years than over the previous 15 combined." This statistic alone reframes the entire narrative of the energy transition; we are no longer in an era of stagnation but of explosive, unexpected growth. The driver is no longer just residential heating or industrial manufacturing, but the insatiable appetite of the digital economy.
As Joey Politano puts it, "If those projections hold true, commercial power consumption will have grown more in the 4 years since ChatGPT's launch than in the two decades prior." This is a profound historical pivot. The author correctly identifies that the source of load growth has shifted, with data centers now outpacing traditional industrial and residential uses combined. Critics might note that this focus on AI risks overshadowing the steady, long-term electrification of transport and heating, which also plays a massive role in the strain on the grid. However, the sheer velocity of the data center boom makes it the immediate flashpoint.
"The return of sustained load growth after more than a decade and a half of stagnation represents a fundamental change in America's energy markets."
The Policy Paradox
Perhaps the most compelling section of the piece is its analysis of the disconnect between federal policy and market reality. Despite the executive branch cutting subsidies, cancelling permits, and imposing tariffs on key inputs, renewable deployment has not stalled. Politano notes, "Solar power growth is projected to slow slightly this year, though remaining near its 2024 pace, before breaking the growth record again in 2027." This suggests that the economic case for solar and batteries has become so strong that it is overriding political headwinds.
The author highlights a frustrating irony: "Their decision to exempt computers and other data center inputs from tariffs while hitting key electrical infrastructure like wires, transformers, and batteries further exacerbates the energy crunch." This policy choice effectively subsidizes the demand (the data centers) while penalizing the supply (the infrastructure needed to power them). The result is a grid forced to keep coal plants online longer than intended. "Legacy US coal plants... are now being retired at the slowest pace since 2010 as grids are forced to keep them online to meet growing demand."
This framing is effective because it moves beyond partisan bickering to show the tangible economic cost of regulatory friction. The grid doesn't care about ideology; it cares about physics and economics. When the administration blocks solar projects, the cost isn't just lost green energy; it's higher prices for everyone. "US residential electricity prices are up more than 40% since 2020 and continue rising," a direct consequence of supply failing to meet the new demand curve.
The Regional Divergence
The piece shines when it zooms in on the geography of the crisis, revealing a stark divide between states that adapt and those that lag. The Sunbelt is emerging as the engine of the new grid. "Texas alone is set to make up 55% of new US battery capacity and 41% of new solar capacity over the next year." This isn't driven by climate idealism but by raw economic necessity. As Politano observes, "They aren't doing it primarily for climate or ideological reasons, but because it's the easiest way to close their electricity gap and power economic growth."
In contrast, the PJM Interconnection, which covers the mid-Atlantic and is a hub for data centers, is struggling to keep pace. While Texas saw generation rise nearly 30% above pre-pandemic levels, PJM is projected to reach only 15% growth by 2027. This disparity highlights a critical vulnerability: the regions with the highest demand growth are not always the ones building the fastest. The historical context of PJM as a major data center construction hub makes this lag particularly dangerous. If the grid cannot be expanded fast enough in these high-demand zones, the economic costs will skyrocket.
The Battery Imperative
The author correctly identifies that solar alone is not the silver bullet; it is the pairing with storage that changes the equation. "The greatest problem with solar is its temporal inconsistency... This problem becomes even more acute when solar makes up a larger share of the grid." The solution is a massive build-out of batteries, which are now growing at a record pace. "Total US battery power capacity... is projected to double over the next two years to almost 90GW."
This shift is already reshaping the labor market. While fossil fuel plants have shed jobs, the renewable sector is adding them. "Electricians and electrical contractors... employment has risen nearly 150k to a new record high." This is a crucial point often missed in the debate: the transition is creating jobs, but only if the permitting and supply chain bottlenecks can be resolved. The author warns that the US is falling behind global peers in deployment speed. "Having already fallen behind on production, the US risks multiplying the pain if it also falls seriously behind on deployment."
"It is not a coincidence that some of America's fastest-growing state economies, like Texas, are also among the fastest deployers of solar and batteries."
Bottom Line
Joey Politano's strongest argument is that market forces have become more powerful than political obstruction in the US energy sector; solar and batteries are growing despite the administration's best efforts to slow them down. The piece's biggest vulnerability is its relative silence on the specific timeline for grid interconnection reforms, which remain the single biggest bottleneck for new projects. The reader should watch for whether the sheer economic pressure of the "electricity gap" will eventually force a policy reversal at the federal level, or if the regional divergence between states like Texas and the rest of the country will deepen into a permanent structural divide.