Artificial intelligence has emerged as the predominant topic on Wall Street in the past year, with investors eagerly awaiting its transformative impact. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, recently likened the forthcoming AI revolution to historical game-changers like the printing press, the steam engine, electricity, computing, and the Internet in his latest annual letter.1 As we delve into AI’s capabilities, we’ve marveled at its capacity to produce feature-length movies, identify previously undetected medical conditions in brain scans, and autonomously create music and art—an awe-inspiring development that echoes the realms of science fiction.
At the heart of the AI revolution lies a crucial physical requirement: computing power. Major semiconductor manufacturers such as Nvidia are experiencing an unprecedented surge in demand for their products as Big Tech firms aggressively pursue dominance in processing capabilities. These industry giants have publicly committed to investing up to $200 billion annually in capital expenditures on processors and data centers by 2025, according to reports from the Wall Street Journal’s MarketWatch.2
Data centers play a crucial role in converting power from the electrical grid and computing capacity from chip and hardware manufacturers into the AI capabilities showcased by platforms like ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Claude, among others. However, a pressing concern looms for computing giants: where will the grid source the power required to sustain the expected AI boom? Each new data center demands approximately 100 megawatts of power annually, equivalent to the energy consumption of 80,000 domestic households, according to estimates from the US Department of Energy.3
The solution lies beneath the earth’s surface, particularly in regions like the Haynesville basin spanning East Texas and Louisiana: good old American natural gas. Following the beginning of the war in Ukraine, domestic natural gas prices soared to a peak of over $9 per thousand cubic feet (MCF). Speculators accurately predicted that Europe would pivot towards diversifying its energy sources away from Russian natural gas, leading to increased efforts to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the United States. However, fast forward to today: after two years of unusually warm winters, the price of natural gas has plummeted to under $2 per MCF. In my assessment of energy prices, this equates to a crude oil price equivalent of roughly $15 per barrel. This stands in stark contrast to the present spot price of crude oil, which hovers around $85.