AI power demand: why NEE is the utility sector's AI infrastructure trade
The explosion in AI data center electricity demand has transformed the narrative around utility stocks in 2024-2026. A single large-scale AI training cluster can consume 100-200 megawatts of continuous power — equivalent to powering tens of thousands of homes. Hyperscalers (Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta) have signed long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs) at historically high rates because power scarcity in key data center markets has become a constraint on AI capacity expansion.
NextEra Resources — NEE's non-regulated renewable development arm — is the best-positioned utility to capture this demand because it already has the largest contracted renewable pipeline in the US and the relationships, engineering capability, and balance sheet to build at scale. When Microsoft, Google, or Amazon signs a 20-year wind or solar PPA with NextEra, it locks in revenue that supports the parent company's dividend growth target. For traders, this means NEE has both a regulated utility floor (FPL's rate base earning guaranteed returns) and a growth kicker from AI infrastructure buildout.
- Track hyperscaler PPA announcements with NextEra Resources — each large deal adds contracted revenue and justifies development pipeline investments.
- FPL's Florida regulated rate base grows at ~9% annually through storm hardening and clean energy transition — this is the predictable earnings floor.
- NEE's development backlog (contracted but not yet built capacity) is the most important forward-looking metric in quarterly earnings.