The grid is running out of neutral ground.
NV Energy, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway Energy, has notified Liberty Utilities that it will end its power supply agreement, effective May 2027, according to reporting by MarketWatch. The stated driver: rising electricity demand from Alphabet, Apple, and Microsoft data center developments east of Reno at and near the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center.
What makes this more than a bilateral utility contract dispute is the supply math. NV Energy reportedly provides approximately 75% of Liberty Utilities’ electricity for the Lake Tahoe region, per MarketWatch. When that supply exits in May 2027, Liberty Utilities doesn’t have a confirmed replacement. The company has stated its customers won’t lose power, but no replacement supply contract has reportedly been finalized. Connecting Liberty Utilities to California’s grid to fill the gap is estimated to cost hundreds of millions of dollars, according to MarketWatch.
The people holding the bill aren’t the hyperscalers. They’re approximately 49,000 California households in the Lake Tahoe region, according to reporting by MarketWatch and regulatory filings reviewed by the Sierra Club Tahoe Area Group.
Why it matters
This is what grid-level displacement looks like on the residential side. The AI data center energy demand story has been well-documented across wholesale markets, PJM wholesale prices jumped 76% in Q1 2026 as AI load strained transmission capacity, but the consumer displacement mechanism has been abstract until now. NV Energy choosing industrial AI load over a residential utility contract makes the tradeoff concrete. A utility doesn’t have to announce a policy to have one. The contract termination is the policy.
Context and precedent
The Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center has become one of the most contested power zones in the western U.S., with hyperscaler data center buildouts compressing available grid capacity that smaller utilities depend on. This follows a documented pattern: the NextEra-Dominion merger, Oregon’s emerging data center tariff frameworks, and DOE grid capacity warnings have all pointed toward this kind of bilateral contract displacement becoming more common as AI infrastructure investment scales.
Liberty Utilities serves a region split across state lines, Nevada utility infrastructure, California residential customers, which adds a regulatory coordination challenge. The Public Utilities Commission of Nevada has jurisdiction over NV Energy’s actions; California regulators have jurisdiction over the affected customers. No single regulator owns the whole problem.
What to Watch
What to watch
The May 2027 deadline gives Liberty Utilities roughly 12 months to secure replacement supply or build an independent grid connection. Watch whether California’s Public Utilities Commission intervenes on behalf of the 49,000 affected households, and whether the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has standing to review the termination as a grid reliability issue. The Sierra Club Tahoe Area Group’s regulatory filings suggest advocacy pressure is building, that often precedes a formal regulatory action.
TJS synthesis
NV Energy’s exit from the Liberty Utilities contract isn’t a one-off negotiation failure. It’s a preview of the utility decisions that will become routine as AI infrastructure demand scales beyond what existing grid architecture can serve without tradeoffs. The question isn’t whether more utilities will face similar choices, it’s whether regulators will build consumer protection frameworks before or after the next Liberty Utilities situation lands. Watch the PUCN’s response to this specific termination: it will signal how much regulatory cover residential customers can expect when industrial AI load and consumer supply collide.