President Donald Trump gathered the leaders of America’s most powerful technology companies at the White House on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, to sign a Ratepayer Protection Pledge.
The pledge is a voluntary commitment by the likes of Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Oracle, and xAI to build, finance, or procure their own power generation and cover all infrastructure upgrades associated with their data centers, ensuring that those costs are not passed on to ordinary American households.
The move addresses a growing political liability for a Trump administration that has pushed for more investments in AI and infrastructure developments of data centers.
A CNBC analysis published last November found that average electricity prices had risen more than 6% nationally, with households in states like Virginia, Illinois, and Ohio hosting high concentrations of data centers seeing rates climb by as much as 12% to 16% over the past year.
Other states like California and Texas have also seen slight bumps in their electricity bills.
What exactly are the tech companies promising to do?
Under the terms of the pledge, companies will negotiate separate rate structures with utilities and state governments and are committed to pay those rates for power and related infrastructure brought online to service their data center, whether they use the electricity or not.
They will also coordinate with grid operators to make backup generation resources available, contributing to grid resilience and helping to prevent blackouts during emergencies.
David Sacks, the Trump administration’s AI and crypto czar, hailed the deal on X as a superior alternative to “Bernie Sanders’ total ban on new data centers, which would halt the construction boom currently driving wage growth and job growth for blue-collar workers.”
Sacks believes the pledge would lower electricity prices when AI companies pay for grid upgrades and sell surplus power back to the grid. The pledge also commits signatories to hire and train workers from within the communities where they build and operate facilities, a provision the White House said would create thousands of local jobs.
The signing follows a series of executive actions by Trump to address energy bottlenecks in the AI sector, including regulatory reforms to accelerate deployment of advanced nuclear reactors for data center use, the “Winning the Race: America’s AI Action Plan” launched in July 2025, and an intervention by the National Energy Dominance Council in January 2026 in the troubled PJM power market, a move the White House says “will drive what is expected to be the single largest development of power plants in U.S. history.”
Will the pledge actually protect consumers from rising bills?
Roughly ten days ago, some energy experts and environmental groups cast their doubts on President Trump’s pledge.
Ari Peskoe, director of the Electricity Law Initiative at Harvard Law School, told Politico that the White House was “putting this pledge on the wrong entities,” since the details of how energy costs are distributed among ratepayers are determined by utilities and state regulators, not by the technology companies signing the document.
Brandon Owens, a grid expert and founder of advisory platform AIxEnergy, noted that most cost pressure comes from transmission, distribution, and system readiness; expenses are likely to persist even if a data center self-supplies generation.
Lena Moffitt, executive director of Evergreen Action, pointed out that the voluntary agreement contains no enforcement mechanisms and provides ratepayers with no means of verifying whether companies honor their commitments, with climate group 350.org dismissing the pledge as a “theatrical stunt with no enforceable mechanism.”
AI rush and power demands push Bitcoin miners to pivot
The Ratepayer Protection Pledge comes at a time when a parallel transformation is underway in the cryptocurrency sector. Bitcoin miners, who already operate large-scale data centers with secured power capacity and the precise infrastructure now in demand, are liquidating their coin holdings at an increasing pace to fund pivots into AI and high-performance computing.
More than 15,000 BTC have been sold from peak treasury holdings across publicly listed miners, according to data from BTC Treasuries, with sales from Core Scientific, Bitdeer, Riot Platforms, and Bitfarms accounting for the bulk of those disposals.
Core Scientific, one of the largest listed miners, sold roughly 1,900 Bitcoins for approximately $175 million in January and expects to liquidate substantially all of its remaining holdings during the first quarter of 2026, directing proceeds towards AI colocation expansion.
Bitdeer has reduced its treasury to zero, having raised a further $368 million through convertible notes and equity to fund data center and AI cloud growth. Bitfarms’ chief executive officer Ben Gagnon has been blunt about the shift, declaring, “We are no longer a Bitcoin company.”
It is also worth noting that the same technology giants whose energy appetites drove Trump’s ratepayer pledge are also the end clients that pivoting Bitcoin miners are rushing to serve, and these giants are also heavily involved in the investments that are pushing these pivots, as the AI race intensifies.
Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/tech-giants-to-cover-power-costs-data-center/