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Delaware Data Center Intel

Latest data center news, projects, power and policy across Delaware — updated daily.

Recent Delaware data center news

  • We’ve signed a first-of-its-kind agreement with Voltus to create a smart capacity solution for the grid.

    Google has signed a three-year agreement with Voltus to create a smart capacity solution for the PJM grid.

    • Three-year agreement: Google and Voltus will unlock up to 100 megawatts (MW) of new electricity capacity from flexible distributed energy resources in the PJM grid region (which serves 67 million people). Voltus will orchestrate batteries and smart thermostats, reducing demand when the grid needs it and paying participating local homes and businesses. Implementation timeline: three years from the agreement start.
    • Background and supporting detail: The post links a Brattle report estimating U.S. consumers could save more than $100 billion over the next decade through smarter grid utilization; Google frames this as part of broader pilots (including data center demand response) to scale models that strengthen grids serving Google data centers.
  • Targeted Pressure: How Chinese Manufacturing Competition Impacts US States

    The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) has published a report finding Chinese industrial policy is reshaping global manufacturing and harming industries across every U.S. state.

    • Main finding & method: The ITIF report (June 1, 2026) analyzes one “national power industry” per state using County Business Patterns employment data, HS/SITC export proxies, and global market-share series to conclude that state-backed Chinese subsidies, export pushes, and overcapacity are driving down prices and pressuring U.S. producers in sectors such as semiconductors, batteries, aircraft, and fabricated metals.
    • Key facts, numbers, and timelines:China plans ~$150 billion in semiconductor investment through 2030 vs. $52 billion under the U.S. CHIPS funding; the report cites $63.3 billion Chinese semiconductor spending in H1 2025, TSMC’s $165 billion U.S. investment announcement, GE Appliances’ $490 million Appliance Park investment (2025), and state/national export shares and HS-code trade series used throughout the analyses.
  • From Backup to Prime Power: How AI Data Centers Are Bypassing the Grid

    Data center developers and suppliers are increasingly adopting onsite prime power generation and expanded backup generator deployments to bypass grid connection delays.

    • Main action: Data center operators and developers are pursuing on-site prime power (backup generators and engine power plants) to bypass grid congestion and accelerate time-to-power; analysts project more than 35 GW of data center power is likely to be self-generated by 2030 (Omdia), and 27% of data centers are expected to rely entirely on onsite generation for primary power by 2030 (Bloom Energy survey). Key names: Omdia, Wärtsilä Energy, Rolls-Royce, Cummins, Applied Digital; concrete project detail: Wärtsilä supplying 282 MW via 15 × 18V50SG engines for a new Ohio data center.
    • Background and specifics: Grid constraints drive the shift—LBNL projects data centers will account for 12% of U.S. electricity demand by 2028; equipment and supplier responses include Rolls-Royce investing $75 million (Aiken, SC mtu Series 4000 production) plus $24 million expansion in Mankato, MN, Cummins’ containerized Centum Force offering, and deployment of synchronous clutches (SSS Clutch Company) to enable ancillary grid services and improve generator economics.
  • Battery Storage Gains Ground as Data Centers Seek Diesel Alternatives

    Caterpillar has reached an agreement to supply American Intelligence & Power Corporation (AIP) with Cat G3516 fast-response natural gas generator sets for AIP’s Monarch Compute Campus near Point Pleasant, West Virginia.

    • Main announcement: Caterpillar will supply Cat G3516 fast-response natural gas generator sets to AIP’s Monarch Compute Campus, with deliveries scheduled this year and a campus power target of 2 GW in 2027; BESS will augment the system to handle extreme AI transients.
    • Context and additional details:MarketsandMarkets projects the global BESS market to grow from $50.81 billion in 2025 to $105.96 billion by 2030; BloombergNEF reports 112 GW of annual energy storage additions in 2025. The article notes Oracle adding BESS at multiple data centers, Aligned Data Centers funded and gifted a BESS facility to a local utility (data center access up to four hours on weekdays during outages), and Baker Hughes supplying 16 NovaLT gas turbines to Frontier Infrastructure combined with BESS and synchronous condensers. Synchronous condenser and power-electronics suppliers named include Siemens Energy, Eaton, and GE Vernova, with hybrid examples such as the Shannonbridge project in Ireland (70 MW BESS with a synchronous condenser).
  • IQ Fiber Launches Fiber-Optic Internet Service in Pinellas County, Florida

    IQ Fiber has launched 100 percent fiber-optic internet service in Pinellas County, Florida, covering St. Petersburg, Clearwater, and Largo.

    • Launch: IQ Fiber launched 100% fiber-optic internet service in Pinellas County (St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Largo); Investment: marks the beginning of a more than $100 million investment in the region; Jobs: expected to create more than 50 permanent jobs.
    • Background & footprint: Jacksonville-based company founded in 2021 with funding from SDC Capital Partners; current network serves Jacksonville and Gainesville (FL) and areas in Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, and South Carolina; public comments quoted IQ Fiber CEO Ted Schremp and Clearwater Mayor Bruce Rector.
  • On Permitting, Delaware's Democratic Governor Gets Praise from Conservative Analyst

    Delaware Governor Matt Meyer issued an executive order to accelerate broadband permitting and related reviews.

    • Executive action: Gov. Matt Meyer’s executive order (Permitting Accelerator) will clear permit backlogs, establish expedited review for energy projects, and require state agencies to submit public progress reports; the order was referenced in coverage on April 21, 2026.
    • Context and advocacy:Satya Marar (Research Fellow, Mercatus Center at George Mason University) published a supportive blog post arguing that reducing regulation will help close the digital divide and enable AI, autonomous vehicles, and telemedicine; a coalition of broadband trade groups pushed for the American Broadband Deployment Act on April 14, 2026, a bill first introduced in 2020 and re-introduced multiple times, which could come to a House floor vote this week according to House Majority Leader Steve Scalise.
  • XCF Global, Southern Energy Renewables and DevvStream Sign Definitive Business Combination Agreement with Respect to Previously Announced Proposed Three-Party Merger to Create Next-Generation Energy Platform

    XCF Global, Inc. has announced the execution of a definitive Business Combination Agreement with DevvStream Corp. and Southern Energy Renewables Inc. to form a combined, globally scalable energy transition platform.

    • Transaction announcement and structure: The parties executed a definitive Business Combination Agreement to merge XCF, DevvStream and Southern into a combined company; DevvStream will domesticate from Alberta to Delaware prior to closing, XCF will acquire 100% of DevvStream and Southern through merger subsidiaries, and post-closing ownership is expected to be ~66.7% XCF shareholders, 23.3% Southern shareholders, and 10.0% DevvStream shareholders. The transaction remains subject to shareholder approvals, SEC Form S-4 effectiveness, Nasdaq approvals, completion of financing, plant conversion, commercial milestones and fairness opinions.

    • Capital, milestones and assets: XCF has invested ~$10 million in conversion of the New Rise Reno facility (permitted nameplate 38 million gallons/year) to support SAF production; Southern is expected to pursue up to $400 million in bond financing for infrastructure; the combined company is targeting annualized fuel-related revenues > $1.0 billion and minimum annualized EBITDA of $100 million, and has an aspirational target of creating a $3.0 billion combined enterprise on a future date.

  • Panel discusses how energy demand from data centers nationwide will impact Pennsylvania

    The Clean Energy Group, Clean Air Council and Physicians for Social Responsibility Pennsylvania released a report titled “The High Cost of AI: How Data Centers are Reshaping Pennsylvania’s Energy Landscape.”

    • Main finding: The report finds Pennsylvania will export electricity to surrounding PJM states to meet growing data center demand, with PJM relying on Pennsylvania to supply energy to high-demand importers like Virginia (35% of hyperscale data centers); it projects an additional 24 to 44 million metric tons of CO2 by the end of the decade and an estimated $20 billion public health burden in 2028.
    • Background & local context: The report was discussed at a University of Scranton event with local officials and residents; Archbald has six proposed data center campuses under local opposition, the groups support Sen. Katie Muth’s three-year moratorium (co-sponsored by Sen. Rosemary Brown), and utilities such as PPL Electric Utilities perform system upgrade studies that can socialize costs across ratepayers.
  • IQ Fiber Invests $150 Million for Delaware Fiber Internet Buildout

    IQ Fiber launched its all-fiber network in Kent County, Delaware, and announced the start of a $150 million investment.

    • Main announcement: IQ Fiber will build an all-fiber network in Kent County, Delaware as the start of a $150 million investment, with construction continuing over the next 18–24 months and the company planning to bring 50 permanent jobs to the state; the network will deliver up to 10 gigabits per second with 99.99% reliability and IQ Fiber will establish a Sales, Engineering, and Technical Operations Center in Dover, Delaware.
    • Background and implementation details: Under Gov. Matt Meyer’s Permitting Accelerator the project is designated a priority broadband project enabling state agency coordination, reduced permitting obstacles, and accelerated permitting; the announcement quotes Delaware Broadband Office Executive Director Connor Perry and emphasizes streamlined deployment and local staffing, with no contracts and “straightforward pricing” specified by IQ Fiber CEO Ted Schremp.
  • States Race to Win the Tech Economy in 2026 State of the State Addresses

    Broadband and technology were prioritized across nearly 30 governors’ 2026 State of the State addresses.

    • Main announcement: Governors across the country emphasized broadband expansion, AI policy and workforce development, and data center/energy planning; specific claims include Maine reporting “more than a quarter million homes and businesses” served, Wisconsin reporting 410,000 businesses and households with new or improved internet, Kansas connecting 117,000 households and businesses, and the Virgin Islands reporting a territory-wide internet program with over 50,000 users per month. The addresses also included concrete funding and contract figures: Maryland announced a $4 million AI workforce training investment, and South Dakota cited a $35 million Department of Defense contract for warhead production.
    • Background and other details: Governors described partnerships and policy actions: Maryland cited collaborations with Bloomberg Philanthropies, Microsoft, a South Korean biotech firm, and AstraZeneca for AI work; Iowa cited partnerships with Amazon Web Services and Google Public Sector to modernize state systems; several governors (Indiana, New York, Nebraska) debated who should shoulder data center energy costs or accelerate permitting; some states (New Hampshire, Delaware, South Carolina) signaled nuclear energy pathways and DOE engagement. Implementation timelines are those stated in addresses (2026) and referenced ongoing programs and contracts (e.g., South Dakota’s $35 million DoD contract already awarded).

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