AI to boom natural gas market

Jul. 25—Artificial intelligence centers are coming on fast and they will have a big impact on the natural gas market as they require tremendous amounts of electricity.

Odessa oilman Kirk Edwards, State Rep. Brooks Landgraf and Waco economist Ray Perryman say the AI revolution is a complex scenario.

"The world is experiencing a massive move toward more artificial intelligence in almost every aspect of our lives," Edwards said. "But like everything, that 'AI' explosion will come at a huge cost and that cost will be in the amount of energy required to run the computing power of those data centers.

"The problem is, there is not enough energy currently available to feed this huge demand ahead. Solar and wind are not at all even contemplated because the data centers need consistent, reliable and on demand 24/7 power, which again cannot be done through renewables."

Edwards said the immediate answer is more power from natural gas and then down the road nuclear power as the new generation of fleets gets built and deployed.

"Natural gas is plentiful here in the United States and easy to deploy," he said. "That is of course if the industry does not run into the red tape that has been delaying or slowing down more plants being built.

"The AI future is here and it is coming on strong. It will be very interesting to see how industry and investors react on how to power the beast ahead."

Landgraf, an Odessa Republican who represents Ward, Winkler, Loving and Ector counties in the Texas Legislature in Austin, said Texas is the friendliest place in the world for businesses to set up shop and the flourishing crypto mining data centers that are popping up all over West Texas.

"We expect AI data centers, which have yet to arrive in the Permian Basin, to soon follow suit," Landgraf said. "These data centers are at the cutting edge of our burgeoning digital economy, bringing hundreds of new, diverse and high-paying jobs to the Permian Basin.

"We'd all love to see these benefits continue, but to achieve that we'll need to address the significant energy needs of such facilities."

He said AI computation is an intensive process that requires the analysis of vast amounts of data by complex learning models.

"Similarly, crypto mining involves computers solving difficult puzzles for hours on end," Landgraf said. "All this computation takes energy and lots of it.

"The largest data centers can require over 100 megawatts of power to operate at full capacity, or enough energy to power tens of thousands of homes. The need for large amounts of reliable energy is one reason so many data centers have chosen the Permian Basin, where they have direct access to our natural gas."