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Tsvetana Paraskova
Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews.
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By Tsvetana Paraskova – Sep 20, 2025, 6:00 PM CDT
- Natural gas producers and pipeline operators anticipate accelerated approval and development of gas infrastructure to address rising electricity demand and consumer bills in the era of AI.
- Despite record energy production, U.S. electricity prices have increased faster than inflation, prompting industry leaders to advocate for more gas connections to data centers and manufacturing.
- Analysts and investment firms like Goldman Sachs see natural gas as uniquely positioned to meet the projected 2.4% annual increase in U.S. electricity consumption through 2030, with AI-related demand accounting for two-thirds of this growth.


Top natural gas producers and pipeline operators expect the industry and various U.S. states to accelerate approval and development of natural gas infrastructure in the new normal American electricity market of rising demand and consumer bills.
American ratepayers have seen electricity prices rising at a faster pace than U.S. inflation over the past three years. These increases are set to outpace the rate of inflation through 2026, the Energy Information Administration says.
At the same time, the United States has never produced more energy than now, with a record amount in 2024 and rising output of oil and natural gas in 2025, too.
The abundance of energy could help lower electric utility bills for consumers—if there is enough gas linked to powering data centers and manufacturing, the primary growth drivers of U.S. power demand.
Eventually, the spiking energy costs will lead to the various U.S. states approving additional gas infrastructure, EQT Corp, one of America’s top natural gas producers, reckons.
“We’ve never produced more energy than we’re producing now, but Americans’ energy bills are up over 35%,” EQT’s chief executive Toby Rice said during BloombergNEF’s ‘Barrel of Tomorrow in the Age of AI’ summit in Houston this week.
“That’s the catalyst that’s going to get people asking questions,” the executive added.
His opinion that additional infrastructure, most of all gas, will help bring down elevated consumer energy bills was shared by Cynthia Hansen, Executive Vice President & President, Gas Transmission & Midstream at pipeline giant Enbridge, and Chris James, founder and chief investment officer at Engine No.1, an investment firm.
Texas, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Louisiana – key gas-producing states thanks to the shale regions the Permian, Appalachia, and Haynesville – could be frontrunners in the race to add more gas infrastructure, Enbridge’s Hansen said. Big Tech is scouting for sites in these states amid rising interest to build data centers there to take advantage of the nearby gas supply and friendlier regulatory environment, Hansen said at the BNEF summit.
So far this decade,

