Oregon
Oregon utility to review PGE plan over data center cost concerns
PORTLAND, Ore. (KATU) — The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) has accused Portland General Electric (PGE) of circumventing Oregon’s new POWER Act, which mandates that data centers cover their own energy costs.
CUB claims PGE’s proposed cost-sharing framework unfairly burdens residential customers with a significant portion of the expenses associated with data center growth.
The consumer advocacy group was established in 1984, as a utility watchdog over Oregon’s three investor-owned electric utilities, PGE, Pacific Power and Idaho Power.
PAST COVERAGE | Oregon House passes bill making large data centers pay for power grid costs
According to CUB, PGE’s plan would charge residential customers 34-45% of the costs for new power supply and transmission, despite data centers being the primary drivers of increased energy demand.
CUB argues that this approach contradicts the intent of the POWER Act, which aims to prevent Oregon families from subsidizing data centers.
PGE, however, defends its proposal. The company mentioned a new tool called the Peak Growth Modifier as a means to ensure that those driving peak demand growth bear the associated costs.
“The electric grid and generating resources are built to make sure customers are reliably served at moments when usage is at its highest point – this is peak demand,” PGE said. “The principle is simple: customer groups driving peak-demand growth should pay for the infrastructure needed to serve that growth.”
The Oregon Public Utility Commission is currently reviewing PGE’s plan, with a decision expected by April 2026.
The POWER Act, signed by Gov. Kotek, instructed the commission to create a new industrial customer class for those using over 20 megawatts of energy, primarily data centers.
The bill also included provisions for infrastructure cost-sharing mechanisms, customer protections, and long-term contracts for data centers.
What’s the buzz around data centers?
Data centers are facilities that house and run large computer systems. They have been expanding at a fast pace to power the fast-growing AI economy across the country.
They usually contain several computer servers, data storage devices, network equipment and other devices that allow for storing, managing, processing and transmitting data.
SEE ALSO | Exploring AI data centers’ impact on U.S. resources
Currently, residential customers account for 40% of total electricity consumption, while data centers represent only 6% in Oregon.
However, data centers are expected to grow to approximately 20% of total consumption by 2030.
Oregon currently has 138 data centers, according to Data Center Map’s database.
Data centers use a lot of electricity, especially those specifically built to support generative AI.
A new Pew Research Center analysis of federal and international data shows U.S. data centers used 183 terawatt-hours of electricity in 2024, about 4% of all electricity used nationwide, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).
That’s roughly equal to the entire annual electricity use of Pakistan.
According to Pew and the IEA, a typical AI-optimized hyperscale center uses as much electricity as 100,000 homes a year. Newer mega-facilities could use 20 times more once they go online.
In major hubs, especially Northern Virginia, clusters of these centers now consume more than a quarter of the state’s total electricity supply, the Electric Power Research Institute reports.
Carnegie Mellon University estimates U.S. electricity bills could rise 8% by 2030 just from data centers and crypto mining alone, with even steeper hikes in the most data-center-dense regions.
Data centers in the U.S. also consumed 17 billion gallons of fresh, drinking water in 2023, mainly to cool energy-intensive AI chips.
By 2028, hyperscale centers alone could be consuming 16 to 33 billion gallons annually — roughly the yearly use of a mid-sized U.S. city.
The Associated Press and Emma Withrow of The National Desk contributed to this report.
Oregon
Much bigger data center tax breaks on deck in Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek’s bill
Economic development legislation championed by Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek is poised to dramatically expand the state’s tax breaks for data centers, which are already among the largest in the nation.
Oregon data center operators will save nearly a half-billion dollars in local property taxes this year through three different incentive programs. Kotek’s legislation, House Bill 4084, would expand the fastest growing of those three programs.
The standard enterprise zone program provides property tax exemptions for up to five years for new industrial activity in urban and suburban parts of the state. HB 4084, which advanced through a key committee this past week, would double the length of those tax breaks to 10 years.
That means participating companies — chiefly data centers — could save twice as much. It also makes more cities eligible to participate in the enterprise zone program, which could provide an incentive for data centers to move into more communities.
(Separate economic development legislation, Senate Bill 1586, also proposed expanding the enterprise zone program. But lawmakers dropped that provision this month and focused primarily on expanding available industrial land.)
Oregon lawmakers conceived the enterprise zone program in the 1980s as a tool to attract small manufacturers, but they put no cap on how big the incentives could be and attached minimal job requirements.
The tech industry cashed in by siting data centers on hundreds of acres of industrial land in Hillsboro. Property that might otherwise have been used for electronics manufacturing — factories that can employs hundreds or even thousands — now hosts giant server farms that typically employ just a handful of people.
A Hillsboro data center operated by social media company TikTok, for example, is saving $5.6 million this year through the enterprise zone program even though it has just 11 local employees. That works out to more than $500,000 in tax breaks for each worker.
The data center influx has left Hillsboro with very little vacant industrial property so data centers are now looking at nearby communities like Forest Grove, where a California company is now building the first of two large data centers in an enterprise zone adjacent to a residential neighborhood.
Hillsboro data centers saved $45 million in local property taxes last year through the standard enterprise zone program, two-thirds of all the money the program gave away statewide. This year, the data centers will save double that through the same program, nearly $90 million. (The state hasn’t compiled 2026 figures from other industries yet.)
The data center industry is responsible for nearly all the growth in Oregon’s electricity usage, and that has severely strained the state’s electrical grid. The same phenomenon is playing out in other parts of the country, and elected officials in states such as Arizona, Illinois, Michigan and Maryland have proposed reining in the industry and limiting their tax breaks.
Oregon is poised to move in the opposite direction by increasing the industry’s incentives. That baffles Jody Wiser, from the watchdog group Tax Fairness Oregon, who calls the idea “patently ridiculous.”
The boom in artificial intelligence has tech companies building data centers pretty much anywhere they can find power and land. So Wiser said it’s “totally a waste” for Oregon to sweeten the pot.
Neither the governor nor any state legislator has specifically suggested that Oregon needs bigger data center tax breaks. So Wiser said she suspects the governor’s office and legislative leaders didn’t understand how the enterprise zone program is being applied in the 21st Century and advanced the legislation without recognizing that data centers would be the primary beneficiaries.
“Frankly, I don’t think they really realized it. My sense is they didn’t really get it that almost all of the money is going to data centers,” Wiser said. “By the time they realized it they needed the bill to move.”
The governor’s office didn’t directly respond to questions about whether Kotek actually wants larger data center incentives. Instead, her staff highlighted other provisions in the bill designed to accelerate permitting, prepare industrial land for development and update economic development tools.
“The intent behind HB 4084 is to create opportunity for every corner of the state,” Anca Matica, spokesperson for the governor, wrote in an email Friday. “The governor’s effort to expand this economic development tool is intentionally broad and inclusive, not targeted at any single community or industry.”
In her email, Matica noted that a study of Oregon tax incentives from 2022 found that the standard enterprise zone program delivers $29 in economic output for each $1 in tax breaks. That study analyzed results only up through 2020, however, long before the state’s current data center boom.
Even so, the study found that data centers created “significantly” fewer jobs than other industries that participate in the enterprise zone program.
Rep. Pam Marsh, D-Ashland, was among the lawmakers who voted to advance HB 4084 in a legislative committee Thursday. Marsh said she favored closer scrutiny of data centers’ tax breaks and economic impact, but said the Legislature should wait to act until after it receives recommendations from a workgroup Kotek appointed last month to study the industry.
The panel holds its first meeting Friday, but the group has already said it won’t issue any recommendations about data center tax breaks. Still, Marsh said she believes the industry deserves a thorough examination in next year’s full legislative session.
“It is not at all clear to me that data centers provide public or economic development benefits that justify the incentives,” Marsh said. “This issue is inevitably going to come back in 2027.”
Oregon
Dax Whitney Ties Oregon State Strikeout Record With 17 vs Baylor
After a phenomenal first college campaign where he earned Freshman All-America Honors among other national recognition, Oregon State right-handed pitcher Dax Whitney added to his college resume on Friday evening.
In his second start of the 2026 season, Whitney struck out 17 batters as the Beavers beat the Baylor Bears 3-1 on the opening night of the Round Rock Classic.
With his performance, Whitney tied Oregon State’s program record for strikeouts thrown in a single game. He becomes the third Beaver to throw 17 strikeouts in a game after Cooper Hjerpe did it in 2022 and Mason Smith did it in 1994.
Of the 96 pitches that the Blackfoot, Idaho native threw on Friday, 66 were strikes. He allowed one hit with one walk and one batter was hit by a pitch.
The contest was an offensive stalemate through five innings. In the top of the sixth inning, Grambling State transfer Nyan Hayes singled through the left side of the infield, then was able to advance to third base with a Bryce Hubbard single. Jacob Galloway brought Hayes in with a sacrifice fly two batters later to put the Beavs up 1-0.
Oregon State held that lead until the bottom of the eighth. At the start of the inning, the Beavers made the call to replace Whitney with Noah Scott. In his first at-bat, Scott beaned Baylor’s JJ Kennett, who was replaced by Bo Caraway as a pinch runner. Travis Sanders smacked a double to right center shortly thereafter, giving Caraway enough time to score from first and tie the game.
In the top of the ninth, Galloway was hit by a pitch, then advanced to third two following back-to-back walks with two outs. Easton Talt stepped up to the plate and hit a bases-loaded double to score Galloway as well as Brandon Inge to retake the lead for Oregon State.
Albert Roblez took the mound in the bottom of the ninth to pick up the save and preserve the win with two strikeouts.
Though he faced just two batters in relief, Isaac Yeager got the winning decision, moving his record to 2-1 on the season.
Oregon State’s overall record moves to 4-1 on the season. The Beavers’ time at the Round Rock Classic continues on Saturday at 3 p.m. PT. D1Baseball.com will televise the Beavs’ contest with the Southern Miss Golden Eagles of the Sun Belt Conference.
Oregon
Bill to protect public lands advances in Oregon Legislature
The Oregon Senate in a 17-11 vote Thursday advanced a bill meant to safeguard public lands against the threat of privatization.
Senate Bill 1590, sponsored by Sen. Anthony Broadman, D-Bend, would prohibit state agencies from using any funding, data, equipment or staff to help the federal government sell or transfer federal lands to private parties. The measure puts no restrictions on tribes.
Broadman brought the bill in response to efforts from congressional Republicans to include in their massive summer 2025 tax and spending law plans to sell between 2 to 3 million acres of federally-managed land across 11 Western states, including hiking trails and campgrounds in Oregon. Those provisions ultimately failed after receiving bipartisan pushback and because Congress could not guarantee that those lands wouldn’t be bought by antagonistic foreign interests.
Roughly 53% of land in Oregon is managed by the federal government, specifically the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service.
“We will not collaborate with federal efforts to privatize our national parks, our monuments, our sacred places,” Broadman said.
The Senate advanced the bill along party lines, with Republicans citing concerns that the bill would limit private and public partnerships meant to manage the state’s natural resources and protect the health and safety of Oregonians.
Sen. Todd Nash, an Enterprise Republican and cattle rancher, said there are times when it is beneficial to transfer public lands to private hands.
“I just don’t want to put us in a place where we don’t have the benefit of doing that, allowing counties and the state of Oregon to participate in that transfer,” he said.
The bill heads to the House next.
— Mia Maldonado, Oregon Capital Chronicle
The Oregon Capital Chronicle, founded in 2021, is a nonprofit news organization that focuses on Oregon state government, politics and policy.
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