Texas - Chevron Will Save $227 Million In 10 Years w. Tax Break; Related Data Center Will Host "Over 25 Full-Time Jobs"
Ed. Wow. More than 25 full-time jobs! 'Murca!!!!
A major oil company is seeking a state tax break in Texas worth hundreds of millions of dollars to build a massive power plant. The energy wont be going to residential customers, though. Instead, the gas plant will be used to power a data center whose eventual tenant could be Microsoft. Chevron subsidiary Energy Forge One has filed an application with the State Comptrollers board to obtain a tax abatement for a power plant its building in West Texas. In late January, the comptrollers office made a recommendation to support the applications approval the first such approval under the program for a power plant intended solely for data center use.
In March, following news reports that Microsoft was looking into purchasing power from the Energy Forge project, Chevron said that it had entered into an exclusivity agreement with Microsoft and Engine 1, an investment fund involved in the project. In January, Microsoft pledged to be a good neighbor in communities where it is building data centers, including promising to pay a full and fair share of local property taxes. The potential tax abatement for the project comes as big tech companies are battling rising public fury about data centers and electricity costs. It also comes as lawmakers start to cast a more critical eye on ballooning incentives for data centers, some of which have cost some states including Texas $1 billion or more each year.
Ed. - emphasis added.
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The Pecos-Barstow-Toyah school board approved the projects application at a meeting in February. The state pays for the tax abatement, so the school district itself does not lose out on any money. According to documents from the state, the Chevron project could net more than $227 million in savings for the company over a 10-year period, depending on the eventual size of the project and investment. The application says the plant will provide over 25 permanent, full-time jobs, though theres no requirement to do so because its considered an electricity generation facility.The planned gas plant wont connect to the grid, instead providing electricity for direct consumption by a data center, according to its application. So-called behind-the-meter gas plants have become increasingly popular for data center developers facing yearslong waits to connect to the grid. According to data from nonprofit Global Energy Monitor, the U.S. at the start of the year had nearly 100 gigawatts of gas-fired power in the development pipeline solely to power data centers, with several more massive gas projects announced since the data was published.
A Wired analysis of less than a dozen power plants being constructed to explicitly serve data centers, including the Chevron project, found that these power plants are permitted to emit more greenhouse gases than many small- to medium-size countries. The Energy Forge plant alone could emit more than 11.5 million tons of CO2 equivalent annually more than the country of Jamaica emitted in 2024. Beasley told Wired that the plant is being designed to comply with applicable environmental regulations, including all applicable federal and state air quality standards.
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https://grist.org/energy/chevron-wants-a-school-district-tax-break-for-a-data-center-power-plant/