The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has launched the Speed to Power initiative to accelerate large-scale grid infrastructure projects needed to meet surging energy demand from AI, data centers, and U.S. manufacturing. The program seeks to shorten development timelines for both transmission and generation projects, aiming to secure the multi-gigawatt power capacity required to maintain U.S. competitiveness in the global AI race.
DOE officials warned that current development rates are insufficient to support both reindustrialization and the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure. The initiative opens a Request for Information (RFI) to identify near-term investment opportunities, project readiness levels, and specific infrastructure constraints. Stakeholder input will inform how DOE leverages federal funding programs and regulatory authority to expand the nation’s grid capacity.
The policy aligns with President Trump’s Executive Orders declaring a national energy emergency and strengthening grid reliability. DOE’s earlier Report on Evaluating U.S. Grid Reliability and Security projected that blackouts could rise 100-fold by 2030 if firm capacity is not expanded. The Speed to Power initiative positions energy security as central to national competitiveness in AI and broader economic growth.
- DOE’s Speed to Power initiative targets multi-gigawatt generation and transmission projects
- Request for Information seeks input from utilities, grid operators, and private sector stakeholders
- DOE analysis shows current grid expansion is too slow to meet AI and reindustrialization demand
- Initiative supports Trump administration Executive Orders on energy security and AI competitiveness
- DOE warns blackouts could increase by 100x by 2030 without additional firm capacity
“In the coming years, Americans will require more energy to power their homes and businesses – and with President Trump’s leadership, the Department of Energy is ensuring we can meet this growing demand while fueling AI and data center development with affordable, reliable and secure sources,” said Energy Secretary Chris Wright.
🌐 Analysis: The Speed to Power initiative underscores how energy infrastructure has become a critical factor in AI competitiveness. With AI data centers demanding unprecedented power capacity, governments worldwide are revisiting grid policy and investment priorities.







