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Data Centers Are One Reason New Jersey Electric Bills Have Gotten So High

Data centers account for 70 percent of the projected increase in demand to the electricity grid, says New Jersey's grid operator.

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An existing Evoque data center on Enterprise Avenue. There is a large "no trespassing" sign out front. (Carly Baldwin/Patch)

SECAUCUS, NJ — In the past two years, residents of Secaucus have been stunned, baffled and furious over their skyrocketing electric bills.

It's partially the data centers, specifically AI data centers.

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Data centers account for 70 percent of the projected increase in demand to the electricity grid. This was a statement made last year by PJM Interconnection, the company that manages the electric supply power grid in 13 U.S. states, including New Jersey.

Secaucus has 10 data centers within town limits, and two more are coming, Mayor Mike Gonnelli said this week. Equinix and CoreSite are two of the biggest data center operators in town. That doesn't even include other data centers in the Meadowlands that surround the tiny town.

"When Equinix plants multiple facilities in one small town, you know something special is happening," writes this website. "The company operates NY2, NY3, NY4, and NY5 right here in Secaucus, making it one of their most concentrated deployments anywhere on the East Coast. CoreSite follows close behind with its own NY2 and NY3 installations. Other major names include H5 Data Centers and Evocative, alongside providers like Zenlayer, IPTP Networks, 365 Data Centers, and QuadraNet operating in the broader market."

And the current supply on the grid is not even meeting how much electricity data centers demand. As a result, utility companies, such as PSE&G, are forced to buy more energy from out of state and passes those costs directly down to customers.

In the past two years, PJM has increased the supply charge for electric companies (what it charges them for energy) and in turn, PSE&G has increased the transmission charge to customers.

"Data centers use a tremendous amount of electricity. And PJM has been screaming for a while now saying we don't have enough energy generation to supply this data center boom," said Anjuli Ramos-Busot, director of the New Jersey Sierra Club. "This has been long brewing and we are just now seeing the explosion in electric bills because we are seeing data centers built left and right."

Last week, NJ Governor Mikie Sherrill proposed a plan that will require data centers start paying tariffs to offset how much electricity they suck up. They will also have to start reporting to towns and the state their exact electric and water consumption.

NJ Sierra Club wants data centers to create their own clean energy, so they don't have to pull power from the grid. For example, rooftop solar panels could be ideal for data centers, because nearly all of them have broad, flat roofs. However, solar won't provide anywhere close to all the electricity data centers need.

Matt Smith, director of Food & Water Watch New Jersey, said Sherrill's ideas lack teeth. Sherrill's plan calls for data centers to pay for 85 percent of the power they're given over a minimum of 10 years.

"The crisis is now," he said this week. "I am still unclear where they got this 85 percent number from. They should be paying for 100 percent."

Food & Water Watch wants the governor to put an immediate moratorium on any new data center construction in New Jersey, until the state can figure out a way to make data centers pay without passing costs onto homeowners.

Smith compared data centers to a runaway train that nobody knows how to control.

"Data centers have to start paying more than you and I. They have to start paying to cover the expense they are currently passing on to ratepayers. It's unconscionable," he said. "(The government) knew the scale and scope this potential industry had. And instead of putting some common-sense rules in place before this development boom took place, they were busy giving over a billion dollars in tax breaks to data centers. That was their priority."

"We have to protect ratepayers from this industry and we have to require the wealthiest corporations in the word, Big Tech, to pay for the costs these data centers are creating on our electric grid."

Ramos-Busot added:

"Data centers tend to be built where fiber optic cables are, and North Jersey has a lot of fiber optic cables," she said. "That's why you're seeing so many data centers concentrated in North Jersey."

In Secaucus, a new data center is being built where the Burlington Coat Factory used to be located at the end of Hartz Way. And CoreSite, which already operates a massive data center on Enterprise Avenue, plans to build a second data center on County Avenue.

Gonnelli said this week he has "no problem" with data centers opening in town.

"They pay a lot of taxes, a lot," he emphasized. "Nobody works in data centers; they bring very little traffic."

Gonnelli said the bigger problem is that New Jersey no longer produces any electric energy in state, and needs to buy it off the grid, at a premium. He said we should not blame the things that use the most electricity (data centers), and instead focus on creating more electricity in state.

"They shut down the plant behind Laurel Hill (Hudson Generating Station, a coal-powered plant PSE&G closed in 2017)," said Gonnelli. "So now we are buying power from every place else and we have to pay for that."

Gonnelli is a Democrat. Other lawmakers, both Democrats and Republicans from across the state, say the same thing.

"The problem is we no longer produce any electricity in New Jersey," Assemblyman Gerry Scharnfenberger, a Republican from Monmouth County. "So we have to buy it off the grid. That's the real problem nobody is talking about. "

In November, right after the NJ governor's election, PSE&G CEO Ralph LaRossa wrote this op-ed, urging Sherrill to make New Jersey generate electricity again.

"PJM has to figure it out with data centers. Because they just keep coming," said Ramos-Busot. "They use tremendous amounts of energy, most of which comes from fossil fuels. There's also water pollution. A lot of their water cooling systems are not closed-loop, meaning there is significant risk to releasing chemicals back into the water supply ... I would say just stop data center construction altogether if everyone in this country would say, yeah sure, I'm gonna put down my phone, I'm gonna stop using AI and the Internet; I'm gonna stop using social media."

"The government needs to get control."

Related: Data Center Power Demands Are Contributing to Higher Energy Bills (Feb. 2026)

Why Are People So Against AI Data Centers? (June 11) Watch minute 6 through 9 where he specifically talks about how electric companies pass on the costs for data centers to regular ratepayers (homeowners).

The water cooling system at the Evoque data center. (Carly Baldwin/Patch)
Water cooling system to the left. (Carly Baldwin/Patch)
(Carly Baldwin/Patch)
CoreSite has this data center right across the street, also on Enterprise Avenue. CoreSite is planning to open a second data center on County Avenue. (Carly Baldwin/Patch)
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