今夏电费恐超去年:三大因素是背后推手

今夏电费恐超去年:三大因素是背后推手

2025-07-02Business
--:--
--:--
王小二
听众朋友们大家好,欢迎收听新一期的 <Goose Pod>,我是王小二。
Ema
嗨,大家好,我是 Ema!王小二,我们今天要聊的这个话题,可能会让大家的钱包感觉有点紧张啊。
王小二
没错,夏天到了,电费账单恐怕也要跟着“升温”了。今天我们就来深入聊聊,为什么今年的电费可能会超过去年,以及这背后的几个关键因素。
Ema
是的,我们先来看看一些预测数据吧。我看到美国能源信息署(EIA)的预测说,夏季电费平均要上涨4%。嗯…听起来好像还好?
王小二
其实,这已经算是比较乐观的看法了。国家能源援助主任协会(NEADA)和相关研究中心的报告,描绘的画面要严峻得多。
Ema
哦?他们怎么说?
王小二
他们预测,从六月到九月,一个普通家庭的电费总开销会达到784美元。这比去年的737美元,上涨了超过6%。这会是12年来的最高电价。
Ema
哇,784美元!这可不是一笔小数目。而且,天气越来越热,空调用得也越来越多,感觉就像是双重打击。电价贵了,用电量还大了。
王小二
完全正确。而且,除了天气这个我们熟悉的因素,还有一个新的、巨大的电力消耗源头正在出现,那就是人工智能和数据中心。它们是真正的“电老虎”。
Ema
“电老虎”,这个比喻我喜欢,太形象了!我看到有资料说,像谷歌这样的公司,它的数据中心能源使用量在短短四年内就翻了一番。这个增长速度太惊人了。
王小二
是的,这种前所未有的需求增长,正在给我们的电网带来巨大压力。比如说,在美国最大的电力市场PJM,用户的账单上马上就要多出来一项93亿美元的额外成本。
Ema
等一下,93亿美元?这听起来就像是…因为一款新的、超级流行的手机应用占用了大量网络,结果电信公司就在我们所有人的手机账单里加了一笔“网络升级费”?
王小二
你的类比非常贴切。这笔费用就和未来的电力容量需求直接挂钩,而数据中心是主要的驱动因素。有咨询公司预测,到2030年,电价最高可能会因此上涨40%。
Ema
天啊,40%!这太疯狂了。所以我们看到的现象是:家庭账单在涨,而背后的驱动力,除了天气变热,还有一个巨大的、饥渴的科技产业。
王小二
总结得很好。这个现象背后,是几个更深层次的结构性问题。这也引出了我们下一个要讨论的部分:到底是什么,让我们的电费变得如此脆弱?
王小二
好,要理解电费为什么这么高,我们得先看看发电的源头。第一个,也是最直接的因素,就是天然气价格。毕竟,去年美国最大规模的发电来源就是天然气。
Ema
嗯,这个很好理解。就像我们做饭,如果天然气价格涨了,那每顿饭的成本自然就高了。发电厂的“燃料”贵了,电价肯定水涨船高。
王小二
没错。但更有趣,也更复杂的是第二个因素:我们的电网本身。麻省理工学院的一位教授就指出,电费上涨的根本原因在于电网——一个“非常陈旧、效率低下”的系统。
Ema
陈旧、效率低下?听起来很严重啊。我查了些资料,简直不敢相信,我们很多电网设施,竟然还是上世纪五六十年代建的!这就像用老式的电话线来跑现在的千兆光纤!
王小二
比喻很生动,事实也确实如此。美国土木工程师学会给我们的电力基础设施只打了个“D+”的评分。这意味着系统刚刚够用,但状况很差,有很大的恶化风险。
Ema
D+?这在学校里可是不及格的边缘了!我好像还看到报告里提到了一个巨大的“投资缺口”,高达几千亿美元。这个数字是什么意思?是我们欠了这么多钱吗?
王小二
“投资缺口”不是指欠钱,而是指为了让电网达到现代化标准,需要投入但还没投的钱。这个缺口就意味着,电网的维护成本越来越高,效率越来越低。
Ema
我明白了。就像一辆老爷车,虽然还能开,但油耗高、修理费贵。我们不仅要为它昂贵的“油费”,也就是天然气买单,还要为它不断的“修理费”买单。
王小二
正是如此。而且,这辆“老爷车”还面临着一个巨大的难题:交通堵塞。电网的一个核心功能是把电从A点输送到B点。我们陈旧的电网做这件事越来越吃力。
Ema
所以,即使我们在一个阳光充足的地方建了个巨大的太阳能发电站,发电成本很低,但如果电网这条“高速公路”路况太差,电也送不到城市里去?
王小二
完全正确。这就是所谓的“输电瓶颈”。更糟的是,要修建新的输电线路,也就是拓宽“高速公路”,极其困难。这涉及到复杂的监管,还有普遍存在的“邻避效应”。
Ema
“邻避效应”?就是那个“不要建在我家后院”的说法吧?大家都知道需要新电线杆,但谁也不想让这些东西建在自己家附近。
王小二
是的。这导致整个国家电网的现代化进程举步维艰。一方面是能源消耗的爆炸式增长,特别是电力,另一方面,我们的电力“运输系统”却还停留在几十年前。
Ema
嗯,总结一下背景:我们依赖一种价格不稳定的燃料发电,同时,输送电力的系统又老又旧,升级困难。这听起来就像一个随时可能爆发的完美风暴。
王小二
“完美风暴”正是我们面临的境况。而这场风暴的中心,一个新的、强大的“天气系统”正在形成,就是我们之前提到的人工智能。这就把我们带到了问题的冲突点。
Ema
好,这就到了最关键的矛盾点了。既然数据中心是新来的“用电大户”,那为它们升级电网的钱,到底该谁来出?这似乎是核心矛盾。
王小二
没错。有专家警告说,除非监管机构介入,否则为满足这些新增电力需求而升级电网的成本,“将被分摊给所有用户”。
Ema
这听起来有点不公平啊。就像一个城市里开了一家超级耗水的工厂,结果全市人民的水费都涨了,用来给它铺设更粗的管道,即使我们大多数人用水量没变。
王小二
比喻很恰当。从消费者的角度看,这确实是“谁受益,谁买单”的公平性问题。为什么要让普通家庭为科技巨头的电力需求支付账单?
Ema
那科技公司他们是怎么想的呢?他们肯定会说,自己也是客户,而且还在推动创新和经济发展,可能会抵制为基础设施升级单独付费。
王小二
是的,这就是冲突的另一方。他们会辩称,问题的根源在于电网本身无法满足经济发展的需求,这是一个公共基础设施问题,而不是某个行业的问题。
Ema
这就让监管机构陷入了两难。我看到有专家预测,监管机构可能会为了支持AI和数据中心的增长,而放慢能源转型的步伐。这听起来像是一个巨大的利益冲突。
王小二
这是一个非常现实的困境。一边是推动绿色能源的长期承诺;另一边是支持科技行业发展的短期压力。两者在争夺有限的电网资源时,产生了直接冲突。
Ema
所以,监管者就像在走钢丝。如果他们让数据中心支付更多费用,可能会把这些投资吓跑。但如果他们让所有消费者分摊成本,又会引发巨大的民怨和社会不公。
王小二
正是如此。已经有一些解决方案被提出来了。比如,强制要求数据中心在用电高峰期减少需求,或者直接为相关的基础设施升级付费。但这些措施无疑会遭到科技巨头的抵制。
Ema
这真是一个经典的“私人利润与公共成本”的冲突案例。科技公司享受着AI发展带来的巨大利润,但其能源消耗带来的成本,却可能需要整个社会来承担。
王小二
你说到了根本。这场冲突涉及多方利益的博弈,目前看来,还没有一个能让所有人都满意的简单答案。而这场博弈的结果,将直接影响我们下一个要讨论的话题:它对我们社会和经济的真实影响。
王小二
好了,我们已经讨论了现象、背景和冲突,现在来谈谈这些问题正在产生的具体影响。这已经不是理论,而是正在发生的现实了。
Ema
是的,我们前面提到普通家庭的电费账单平均上涨,但这只是冰山一角。对于那些需要消耗大量能源的企业来说,影响可能更加巨大和直接。
王小二
完全正确。一个关键指标是PJM电力市场的“容量电价”。有报告指出,在最近的一次拍卖中,这个价格飙升了近10倍。这是一个非常惊人的数字。
Ema
“容量电价”?这个词听起来很专业。你能用简单的方式解释一下它是什么意思吗?为什么会飙升10倍?
王小二
当然。你可以把“容量市场”想象成一个为未来电力需求买保险的市场。电力公司在这里承诺未来某个时间点能提供足够电力。当市场预测未来需求会非常紧张时,这份“保险”的价格就会飙升。
Ema
我明白了!就像预订热门假期的机票。如果航空公司预测某个日期需求会非常大,他们就会提前高价出售“保证有座”的机票。所以我们其实是在为未来的“用电高峰”提前买单?
王小二
你的比喻非常精准。而这个飙升的“机票”价格,最终会通过电费账单转嫁给每一个用户,包括你我,以及所有企业。这对商业运营的打击是巨大的。
Ema
可以想象,如果一家工厂的电费突然变得不可预测,甚至可能翻倍,他们的整个商业计划都会被打乱。最后这些成本可能还是会转嫁到我们消费者身上。
王小二
是的,这就是连锁反应。除此之外,还有一个更广泛的社会影响,那就是对能源公平性的冲击。电费上涨对所有人的影响并不是均等的,它对低收入家庭的打击最大。
Ema
这确实是一个很严肃的问题。当电费在家庭预算中的占比越来越高时,一些家庭可能就不得不在“开空调降温”和“购买食物药品”之间做出艰难的选择。
王小二
而且,电网的低效率也加剧了这种不公。即使在某些地区,风能和太阳能的发电成本已经很低,但由于电网的“拥堵”,这些廉价的电力很难被输送到真正需要它的地方。
Ema
所以,最终的影响是多方面的:企业成本上升,低收入家庭生活压力加剧,而且我们还无法充分享受廉价清洁能源的好处。真是个坏消息。
王小二
是的,这些影响是真实而深远的。它迫使我们去思考,面对这样的未来,我们有哪些应对之策?这也就是我们接下来要探讨的——未来之路。
Ema
聊了这么多问题,我们总得看看未来有没有希望吧。我们注定要面对永远上涨的电费吗?还是有什么解决办法?
王小二
答案是既有挑战也有希望。关键在于一个词:“主动规划”。人工智能带来的电力需求增长是一个巨大的挑战,但报告认为,这是一个“可以管理”的挑战。
Ema
“主动规划”听起来不错,具体指的是什么呢?是说我们要更聪明地建设电网吗?还是有别的办法?
王小二
两者都有。规划包括“积极的能效提升措施和协调的投资”。这意味着我们需要更智能的电网、更好的储能技术,以及探索新的供电方式。
Ema
新的供电方式?听起来很有趣!我看到资料里提到了“微型核反应堆”和“边缘计算”。边缘计算是说,把计算能力分散到离用户更近的地方吗?
王小二
是的,这正是“边缘计算”的核心思想。如果能实现,就有可能颠覆目前这种高度集中的数据中心模式,从而缓解对单一地点电网的巨大压力。但这需要技术上的突破。
Ema
这些听起来都很好,但好像离我们还有点远。那短期内呢?对于我们普通人来说,除了眼睁睁看着账单上涨,我们还能做点什么?
王小二
专家的建议仍然是关注家庭自身的能源效率。比如,安装更好的隔热材料、更换高效节能的空调系统等等。这些措施可以帮助我们减少用电量,从而在一定程度上抵消电价上涨带来的影响。
Ema
这倒是给了我们一点点控制权。虽然我们改变不了天然气价格和数据中心的需求,但至少可以从自己家做起,节约能源,减少开支。这在今天显得尤为重要。
王小二
好了,总结一下今天的内容。今年夏天我们可能面临的更高电费,是由昂贵的天然气、陈旧的电网以及人工智能热潮带来的巨大电力需求,这三个因素共同造成的“完美风暴”。
Ema
是的,其核心在于我们的电力系统正承受着巨大的压力,而关于如何升级系统以及谁来买单的激烈辩论才刚刚开始。这是一场科技进步与我们钱包之间的较量。
王小二
今天的讨论就到这里。感谢您收听 <Goose Pod>。我是王小二。
Ema
我是 Ema。我们明天再见!

### **Comprehensive Summary of News Report on Summer Electricity Bills** **News Metadata** * **Title:** Summer electricity bills set to jump higher than last year—Here’s why * **Source:** Newsweek * **Author:** Joe Edwards * **Publication Date:** June 28, 2025 * **Topic:** Business / Economy --- ### **Executive Summary** Households across the United States are facing a significant increase in electricity bills this summer, driven by a convergence of three primary factors: a spike in natural gas prices, surging electricity demand from AI-driven data centers, and the high costs associated with an aging and congested national power grid. Multiple forecasts predict a rise in costs, with one report suggesting average household electricity expenses could reach a 12-year high. Experts warn that these issues are systemic, requiring substantial investment and regulatory changes to address the grid's limitations and manage the impact of new, large-scale power consumers. --- ### **Key Drivers of Increased Costs** The report identifies three converging forces responsible for the anticipated price hikes: 1. **Rising Natural Gas Prices:** Natural gas was the leading source for electricity generation in 2023. A recent spike in its cost is a primary driver of higher utility bills. 2. **Surge in Demand from Data Centers:** The rapid growth of artificial intelligence (AI) is fueling "unprecedented" demand for power from data centers. This is forcing grid operators to secure more future power capacity, the multi-billion-dollar costs of which are being passed on to consumers. 3. **Aging and Congested Grid:** The U.S. power grid is described as "antiquated" and "inefficient." Its inability to easily transmit power from where it's generated to where it's needed, combined with the high cost of necessary upgrades, results in ever-rising transmission costs for customers. --- ### **Forecasts and Financial Impact** Different agencies have provided forecasts for the summer, with varying degrees of severity. **Forecast Comparison:** * **Energy Information Administration (EIA):** * Projects a roughly **4% rise** in average electric bills for June, July, and August compared to 2024. * A separate forecast including September suggests a slightly lower increase of just under **3%**, as cooler weather in September reduces demand. * **NEADA/CEPC (National Energy Assistance Directors Association / Center for Energy Poverty and Climate):** * Paints a "grimmer picture," forecasting that the average U.S. household will pay **$784** for electricity from June through September. * This represents a **6.2% increase** from last year's **$737**. * When adjusted for inflation, the increase is approximately **4.3%**, marking a **12-year high** for electricity prices. **Material Financial Data:** * **PJM Interconnection Costs:** In the nation's largest electricity market (serving 13 states and Washington, D.C.), an additional **$9.3 billion** in costs tied to future capacity needs will begin appearing on customer bills this month, driven primarily by data center demand. * **Grid Investment Gap:** The American Society of Civil Engineers gives the U.S. power infrastructure a **D+ grade**. The report calculates a **$578 billion investment gap** for transmission and distribution through 2033, even after accounting for the **$73 billion** allocated under the 2021 infrastructure law. --- ### **Expert Analysis and Key Concerns** Several experts weighed in on the causes and implications of the rising costs. * **Mark Wolfe (Executive Director, NEADA):** Emphasized the cumulative impact of rising costs and temperatures. > "while 4.3 percent doesn't seem like a large increase, this comes on top of bills that have been steadily increasing... Not only that, but families need to use more electricity to cool their homes each year as summer temperatures keep increasing." * **Robert Pindyck (Professor, MIT Sloan):** Identified the grid as the central problem. > "We have a very antiquated, inefficient grid here in the United States, and the result is that if there's any increase in demand—even if the electricity can be generated cheaply—it's very hard to move it from A to B." He noted that regulatory hurdles and local opposition make building new transmission lines extremely difficult. * **Gilbert Metcalf (Professor, Tufts University):** Highlighted the risk of socializing the costs of data centers. He suggested that unless regulators intervene, the costs of grid upgrades needed for new data centers "will be spread to all users." Potential interventions include mandating that data centers curtail demand during peak periods or pay directly for infrastructure improvements. * **Chris Wright (Secretary of Energy):** Warned that the grid is "reaching its limit" and called for urgent action. > "We need to make changes rapidly. We need to see new capacity built, smarter regulation, we need to use our grid wiser." --- ### **Recommendations and Outlook** * **For Households:** Mark Wolfe advises consumers to prepare for long-term extreme weather by improving home energy efficiency. Measures like installing insulation can help manage and reduce cooling expenses. * **For Policymakers:** The report underscores the urgent need for massive investment in grid modernization, streamlined regulations to facilitate the construction of new transmission capacity, and policies to manage how large new loads like data centers connect to the grid without overburdening existing consumers.

Summer electricity bills set to jump higher than last year—Here’s why

Read original at Newsweek

Electricity bills are set to climb across the United States, with households bracing for higher costs this summer.Analysts say three forces are converging: a spike in natural-gas prices, surging load from artificial intelligence (AI)-driven data centers that is triggering multi-billion-dollar capacity charges, and an aging, congested grid that is passing ever-rising transmission costs on to consumers.

Natural Gas PricesThe Energy Information Administration (EIA) projects a roughly 4 percent rise in average electric bills in June, July, and August compared with last year, which it attributed to a spike in the cost of natural gas—the top source of utility-scale electricity generation in 2023.Another forecast from the EIA earlier this week, which included September, suggested an increase of just under 3 percent.

That month generally sees cooler weather, lighter air conditioning use, and marginally lower fuel-driven rates. However, data from the National Energy Assistance Directors Association (NEADA) and the Center for Energy Poverty and Climate (CEPC) painted a grimmer picture.According to this report, from June through September, the average U.

S. household is expected to pay $784 for electricity over this four-month period, a 6.2 percent increase from $737 last year. When adjusted for inflation, the rise amounts to approximately 4.3 percent compared to last year's prices, NEADA and CEPC said, who also noted this would represent a 12-year high for electricity prices."

We predict that prices will be this high for two reasons: first, the cost of electricity is rising faster than [the] average rate of inflation, and second, temperatures are continuing to increase, reflecting the continuing impact of climate change and requiring additional energy to cool indoor spaces," the NEADA/CEPC report said.

Mark Wolfe, executive director of NEADA, told Newsweek that"while 4.3 percent doesn't seem like a large increase, this comes on top of bills that have been steadily increasing."He added: "Not only that, but families need to use more electricity to cool their homes each year as summer temperatures keep increasing."

The Rise of Data CentersPower demand is also set to grow alongside the proliferation of data centers—centralized facilities housing equipment used to store, process, and distribute data.In the PJM Interconnection—the nation's largest electricity market, serving 13 states and Washington, D.C.—an additional $9.

3 billion in costs tied to future capacity needs will begin appearing in customer bills this month, The Wall Street Journal reported.A report by Monitoring Analytics, PJM's independent market monitor, cited "unprecedented" demand, both current and future, from data centers as the primary driver."The report of PJM's Independent Market Monitor, Monitoring Analytics, does affirm what PJM has been saying, which is that supply/demand conditions drove higher prices in the 2025/2026 capacity auction," PJM told Newsweek.

According to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), capacity-market auctions are a reliability backstop: generators compete to promise enough future capacity, and the competition keeps costs down for consumers."Last summer, PJM ran its most recent capacity auction, which saw prices increase significantly from the prior auction.

The result of the increase was primarily based on a continued trajectory of supply decreasing and demand increasing on the system. Higher capacity prices help to send a clear signal that generation investment is needed," PJM told Newsweek.PJM says that demand is increasing primarily due to the power requirements of AI and data centers, but also from electrification—replacing technologies or processes that use fossil fuels with electrically-powered equivalents—and a resurgence in U.

S. manufacturing."Data centers and AI will certainly drive demand up and that could lead to higher electricity prices as more costly generation needs to be brought online to meet demand," Gilbert Metcalf, professor of economics at Tufts University, told Newsweek.He added: "Much depends on how state regulators approve new massive demand loads to connect to the grid.

They could, for example, mandate that data centers curtail demand during peak periods or pay for improved infrastructure to ease congestion. Big data centers will resist this, but new, large demand loads added to the grid do bring increased costs that, unless regulators intervene, will be spread to all users."

Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/Canva America's Aging Grid SystemRobert Pindyck, a finance and economics professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, told Newsweek there was "just one reason" behind rising electricity bills, "and that's the grid.""We have a very antiquated, inefficient grid here in the United States, and the result is that if there's any increase in demand—even if the electricity can be generated cheaply—it's very hard to move it from A to B," he said.

The numbers back up Pindyck's warning. The 2025 American Society of Civil Engineers "Report Card" gives the nation's power infrastructure a D+ and calculates a $578 billion investment gap in transmission and distribution through 2033—even after factoring in the $73 billion already set aside for grid upgrades under the 2021 infrastructure law.

Modernizing the grid to meet demand would be "very hard to do," according to Pindyck.This is in part because different states have different rules. Texas, for example, has its own grid that isn't connected to the rest of the country. It operates like a separate country in that sense, and it's very inefficient, Pindyck added.

Even outside of Texas, building new power lines is extremely hard as there are strict rules about what can be built and where, and people generally don't want new lines in their area. As a result, nothing gets built, Pindyck said.On Thursday, during an appearance on Fox Business' Mornings with Maria, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright warned that the grid was reaching its limit."

We need to make changes rapidly. We need to see new capacity built, smarter regulation, we need to use our grid wiser. There's so many things we need to do to improve it. We can't do it all overnight," Wright said.Wolfe, meanwhile, told CBS MoneyWatch in May that taking efforts to modernize your home can lead to cost savings for households as they try and keep cool during the warmer months.

For instance, installing insulation can help manage and reduce energy expenses."Families should start preparing for long-term extreme weather and think about the energy efficiency of their cooling systems," Wolfe said.

Analysis

Phenomenon+
Conflict+
Background+
Impact+
Future+

Related Podcasts