Subj : If you ask ChatGPT why yo
To   : All
From : Mike Powell
Date : Mon Jul 28 2025 03:25 pm

If you ask ChatGPT why your energy bill is higher, it should probably blame
itself

Date:
Mon, 28 Jul 2025 18:01:01 +0000

Description:
Energy costs are rising for some consumers, and AI might be the root cause.

FULL STORY
======================================================================

Hate to be a 'Debbie Downer' but all those prompts we're using to make action
figures, Ghibli memes, and the countless less exciting life and business
prompts we're stuffing into ChatGPT and other popular generative AI systems
are coming at a cost, and one that may be landing on our doorsteps.

Don't get me wrong, I'm a huge fan of AI as I think it's the first technology
in a generation to have truly society-altering implications but, if you're
like me, you've been reading for some time about the ultra-high energy costs
associated with Large Language Models (LLMs), especially trianing them, which
according to the IEEE , "involves thousands of graphics processing units
(GPUs) running continuously for months."

AI model training is resource-intensive. Compared to traditional programming,
it's like the difference between playing checkers and interdimensional chess
against all the galaxies in the Star Trek universe. The number of parameters
these systems examine to learn the essence of something, so they can
instantly recognize a dog or a tree, because the models understand what makes
up a dog or a tree, is, in human terms, almost inconceivable.

AI understanding is so much more complex than pattern matching. And not only
do these models need to understand these things, they also need to know how
to replicate representations of trees, dogs, cars, people, and scenarios, and
realistically at that.

Feeding the AI monster

It's a heavy lift , and as Penn State Institute of Energy and the Environment
noted in its April 2025 report , "By 20302035, data centers could account for
20% of global electricity use, putting an immense strain on power grids."

However, those energy costs are rising in real time now, and what I never
really accounted for is how energy availability is a sort of zero-sum game.
There's only so much of it, and when some part of the grid is eating more
than its fair share, the remaining customers have to divvy up what's left and
shoulder skyrocketing costs to keep backfilling their energy needs (as well
as the energy needs of the data centers).

In the US, we're seeing this scenario play out in our pocketbooks as,
according to PJM Interconnection (one of the country's largest energy
suppliers), energy bills are rising in response to AI's overwhelming energy
demands .

Data centers, which are dotted across the US , are often responsible for
serving the cloud-based intelligence needs of systems like ChatGPT , Gemini ,
Copilot , Meta AI , and others. The need for supporting live responses and
fresh training to keep the models in step with current information is putting
pressure on our creaky energy infrastructure.

PJM, it seems, is spreading the cost of supporting these Data Centers across
the network, and it's hitting customers to the tune of, according to this
report, as much as a 20% increase in their energy bills.

In need of a solution yesterday

Because we live on AI Time , there is no easy solution. AI development isn't
slowing down to wait for a long-term solution, with OpenAI's GPT-5 expected
soon, Agentic AI on the rise, and Artificial General Intelligence on the
horizon.

As a result, energy demand will surely rise faster than we can backfill with
better energy management, improved infrastructure, and new resources. The
International Energy Agency predicts that in the US, "power consumption by
data centers is on course to account for almost half of the growth in
electricity demand between now and 2030."

The issue is exacerbated by a faltering energy infrastructure in which older
energy plants are becoming less reliable, and some new rules that restrict
the use of fossil fuels. Most experts agree that renewable resources like
solar and wind could help here, but that picture is recently far less sunny.

Tilting at wind mill farms

Earlier this month, the Trump Administration issued an Executive Order to
"terminate the clean electricity production and investment tax credits for
wind and solar facilities." President Trump famously hates Windmill farms,
calling them " garbage ."

As the US pumps the brakes on clean and renewable resources, the current grid
will continue to huff and puff its way through supporting untold numbers of
meme-generating prompts, requests for business proposal summaries, and AI
videos featuring people eating cats that turn into pasta (yes, that's a thing).

At home, we'll be opening our latest electricity bills and wondering why the
energy bill's too damn high. Perhaps we'll power up ChatGPT and ask in a
prompt for an explanation. One could only hope that it points you back to
this article, but that seems equally unlikely.

======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/if-you-ask-chatgpt-why-your-
energy-bill-is-higher-it-should-probably-blame-itself

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