We’ve been sitting on it the whole time.
Description:
Amit Narayan is the founder and CEO of GridCARE. His thesis: America doesn’t have a power shortage, it has a visibility problem. The grid runs at only about a third of its capacity, and GridCARE uses AI to scan it the way an MRI scans a body, finding power utilities simply cannot see with planning tools built decades ago. The company has unlocked more than a gigawatt in the last six months and is actively analyzing over ten. Narayan’s bet: 300 gigawatts are reachable on existing infrastructure within three to five years.
Jigar Shah and Jamie Nolan dig into why the grid sits so underused, and the detail that captures the whole problem: hyperscalers are so power-starved they’re eyeing data centers in space, when the power they need is already on the grid at home.
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I’m going to keep hammering these points til everyone gets it.
Imagine a restaurant open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week that always maintains a full staff. With the exception of weekend nights and the lunch rush, the restaurant will be empty a lot of the time. But the restaurant’s owner is paying to keep it open all the time — spending money on staffing and rent even when the number of customers is low.
That’s the reality of the U.S. electricity grid. It is built to handle “peak demand” — moments of high electricity usage that often happen in the height of summer or in the frigid cold of winter. Power outages can be life-threatening, so utilities have to make sure that, at all costs, the power stays on.
Continue reading “The Weekend Wonk: Finding Power in the Grid’s Couch Cushions”


