# Grid Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Grid", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

A Chip Company Releases AIDC Energy Storage Certification Standards. Why NVIDIA? Computing Power Reshapes Power Supply Logic. Who's in the Lead and Who's Left Out?

NVIDIA has released a "Battery Energy Storage System Self-Certification Guide," setting strict technical standards for energy storage systems specifically for AI data centers (AIDC). The guide focuses solely on certifying the Power Conversion System (PCS), not the batteries, with 10 mandatory performance metrics and 12 validation tests requiring real-world and simulation comparisons. Key requirements include rapid dynamic response to AI workloads, high-frequency system telemetry, and detailed electromagnetic transient models. The move is driven by the extreme and fluctuating power demands of next-generation AI hardware. Modern AIDCs require energy storage systems to act as intelligent, controllable grid assets, not just passive backup, to manage instantaneous, massive power load shifts that traditional UPS systems cannot handle. This redefines the competitive landscape for energy storage providers, shifting focus from capacity and cost to advanced control capabilities and system integration. While the market potential is significant—with forecasts of hundreds of GWh in new demand by 2030—the certification creates a high barrier to entry. It requires proven PCS delivery volumes and credible plans for rapid capacity scaling, favoring established, well-resourced players. Early movers like Fluence (partnering with Siemens) and several Chinese companies have secured projects ahead of the standard, but new entrants must now navigate this rigorous, costly, and time-intensive certification process to compete in the AIDC energy storage market.

marsbit06/23 04:11

A Chip Company Releases AIDC Energy Storage Certification Standards. Why NVIDIA? Computing Power Reshapes Power Supply Logic. Who's in the Lead and Who's Left Out?

marsbit06/23 04:11

The AI-Era Power Arms Race: Energy Order Reshuffle Behind NextEra's Acquisition of Dominion

The AI arms race is shifting from a focus on chips and models to a fundamental battle over electricity. NextEra Energy's proposed $66.8 billion acquisition of Dominion Energy highlights this profound change, as AI's explosive growth is rewriting the growth logic for the power sector. The deal is less about traditional utility consolidation and more about securing a strategic gateway to Virginia’s "Data Center Alley," a critical hub where tech giants have massive, signed load requirements. The core challenge is a growing disconnect: data center construction cycles are far shorter than the years needed to build new power generation and transmission infrastructure. Morgan Stanley predicts a 49GW gap in power availability for U.S. data centers by 2028. Electricity, once a taken-for-granted commodity, is now a scarce and strategic resource. This transforms the competitive landscape—future AI competitiveness may hinge not just on algorithms but on a company's ability to secure long-term, stable, and affordable power supply. The transaction signals a broader revaluation of the entire energy infrastructure chain, from natural gas and nuclear power for base load to storage and transmission equipment. However, the largest variable is regulation. Balancing rapid AI-driven grid expansion with public concerns over costs, fairness, and environmental impact will be a complex political and social challenge. The true value in the coming AI era may lie not just in power generation assets, but in owning the crucial infrastructure nodes, grid access rights, and the regulatory relationships needed to deliver electricity where it's needed most.

marsbit05/19 11:37

The AI-Era Power Arms Race: Energy Order Reshuffle Behind NextEra's Acquisition of Dominion

marsbit05/19 11:37

Nasdaq Stalls, But Power Stocks Keep Hitting New Highs? AI's Second Half: A Deep Dive into the 2026 U.S. Grid Modernization Investment Map

The U.S. stock market in 2026 shows a clear divergence: while the Nasdaq stagnates, industrial, energy, and utility stocks surge. This signals a shift in AI competition from algorithms to physical resources—specifically, power and grid infrastructure. The AI-driven explosion in data center energy consumption, alongside manufacturing reshoring and broader electrification (EVs, heat pumps), is straining an aging U.S. grid. Much of the infrastructure is decades old and ill-equipped for modern demands, leading to bottlenecks, extended delays for critical components like transformers, and rising costs. Grid modernization is not just about expansion but about creating a digital, bidirectional, and self-healing network. Key layers include: - Smart metering (AMI) for real-time data exchange, - Automation and self-healing systems (e.g., FLISR by GE Vernova), - Virtual power plants (VPPs) enabling decentralized energy distribution. Investment opportunities are stratified: - High-margin software/automation firms (e.g., GEV, Siemens, Itron), - Critical equipment manufacturers (e.g., Eaton, ABB, Schneider Electric), - Engineering and construction leaders (e.g., Quanta Services, MasTec) directly capturing infrastructure spending, - Regulated utilities (e.g., NextEra Energy, Duke Energy) managing upgraded networks. The value reassessment of power assets is underway, positioning the grid as a national strategic asset essential to AI and economic resilience.

marsbit02/27 13:31

Nasdaq Stalls, But Power Stocks Keep Hitting New Highs? AI's Second Half: A Deep Dive into the 2026 U.S. Grid Modernization Investment Map

marsbit02/27 13:31

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Blackout, Bitcoin Miners Uninterrupted

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Darkness, Bitcoin Miners That Never Stop In the summer of 2025, Tehran and other parts of Iran faced extreme heat and severe power outages, forcing government offices and schools to shut down. Hospitals relied on diesel generators to keep life-saving equipment running. Yet, behind city walls, rows of Bitcoin mining machines continued operating at full capacity, almost never losing power. Similarly, in Libya, residents endure daily blackouts of 6 to 8 hours, while unauthorized mining farms in abandoned industrial sites run non-stop, using some of the world’s cheapest electricity—subsidized as low as $0.004 per kWh—to mine Bitcoin, often with outdated equipment smuggled into the country. This reflects one of the 21st century’s starkest energy paradoxes: in nations crippled by sanctions and civil conflict, electricity is no longer just a public service but a form of “exportable” hard currency. In Iran, mining was legalized in 2019 as a state strategy to bypass international financial sanctions. Miners were required to sell mined Bitcoin to the central bank. However, an estimated 85% of mining occurred illegally or semi-legally, often with ties to powerful entities. Despite temporary bans and crackdowns, mining rebounded quickly, draining the national grid and worsening public power shortages. Libya, fragmented since the fall of Gaddafi, lacks coherent regulation. Although cryptocurrency transactions and mining imports are officially banned, enforcement is weak. Low subsidized electricity prices create irresistible incentive for mining operators—including foreign groups—to run energy-intensive operations with obsolete machines, while ordinary citizens face daily blackouts. In both countries, Bitcoin mining functions less as a legitimate industry and more as a form of resource extraction: it creates few jobs, contributes little in taxes, and often channels profits overseas. The real cost is borne by society—frequent blackouts, overloaded grids, and compromised public services like healthcare and education. Ultimately, the issue is not Bitcoin itself, but who controls the allocation of public resources. When energy subsidies meant for public welfare are diverted for private gain, it deepens inequality and institutional distrust. As citizens sit in darkness, the miners’ machines continue to hum—a symbol of energy injustice in a fractured world.

marsbit02/02 02:38

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Blackout, Bitcoin Miners Uninterrupted

marsbit02/02 02:38

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