EEI - Edison Electric Institute Inc.

12/18/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/18/2025 11:43

New EEI Podcast: Powering Data Centers While Delivering Value to All Customers

New EEI Podcast: Powering Data Centers While Delivering Value to All Customers

New EEI Podcast: Powering Data Centers While Delivering Value to All Customers

Entergy Mississippi and Amazon Web Services Leaders Discuss Partnership That Drives Investments, Delivers Meaningful Community Benefits, and Enhances the Grid

WASHINGTON (December 18, 2025) - The Edison Electric Institute (EEI) today released a new episode of its Electric Perspectivespodcast featuring Entergy Mississippi President and CEO Haley Fisackerly and Amazon Web Services (AWS) Head of Energy and Water for the Americas Brandon Oyer. EEI President and CEO Drew Maloney opens the episode by highlighting how electric companies are collaborating with data centers and hyperscalers to support innovation and ensure these large customers pay their fair share for America's energy grid.

Fisackerly and Oyer discuss how electric companies and large-load customers like Amazon are working together to deliver clear benefits to the grid and existing customers while strengthening reliability. The episode also highlights a new Energy and Environmental Economics (E3) studyexamining electricity rate design and tariffs for large loads like data centers, based on real-world case studies from Amazon's partnerships with electric companies.

In the episode, Fisackerly, Maloney, and Oyer reflected on:

  • Partnerships: "Data centers are critical infrastructure for our nation's economy and our national security. Electric companies are working closely with our technology partners to ensure these facilities improve the grid and benefit all customers," said Maloney. "We are seeing examples of this win-win situation across the country. One example is the partnership between Amazon and Entergy Mississippi, and their collaboration to deliver value for customers and their communities while positioning the grid for the future."
  • Enhancing the grid: "We had a $600 million capital plan already planned to improve our grid. Because of the new revenues coming in from AWS, we're going to be able to increase that by more than 50 percent-spending another $300 million on our reliability plan," said Fisackerly. "All of this will bring huge value. Because of AWS, we were able to pull a lot of those investments forward and improve reliability. We have a 50-percent reduction in outages with a 50-percent increase in spending, with no cost to customers. This is exciting, transformative, and it will make a difference in the lives of our customers and the communities we serve."
  • Strengthening the economy: "In Madison County, Mississippi, we're investing $10 billion to build two data center campuses, creating at least 1,000 full-time jobs. In Warren County, Mississippi, we're investing $3 billion-the largest private investment in the county's history. We're creating another 200 jobs at that data center campus while supporting 300 additional jobs in and around the community," said Oyer. "Combined, these investments will support an estimated 3,000 jobs to bring these data center campuses to life and add $3.9 billion to Mississippi's GDP."
  • Protecting existing customers: "[The E3 study] found that Amazon's investments are enabling companies to make investments in the broader grid. Historically, customers would have to pay for this, but now that large load is coming along, these bigger customers are able to absorb that cost," said Oyer. "These crucial investments in grid infrastructure do everything from meeting immediate needs to supporting local residents to driving commercial growth while improving reliability."
  • Benefits of cooperation: "What we're able to do with Amazon is bring in this large customer with all the other benefits that Brandon discussed: new jobs and huge capital investments that are allowing us to make meaningful investments and improve the grid serving all of our customers," said Fisackerly. "We're also seeing them pay the full freight of their costs. We're having to make upgrades to the transmission system that improves import capabilities that benefit everyone, and they're paying those incremental costs."

Click here to listen to the full podcast, and explore our latest episodes below:

The Electric Perspectivespodcast discusses the latest trends and issues shaping the electric power industry. Each episode features an interview with guests including leaders from EEI and our member companies, government and industry partners, and energy thought leaders and experts. Click hereto listen to more episodes and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.

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About EEI

EEI is the association that represents all U.S. investor-owned electric companies. Our members provide safe, reliable electricity for nearly 250 million Americans, and operate in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Collectively, the electric power industry supports more than 7 million jobs in communities across the United States and drives economic growth and prosperity. EEI also includes hundreds of industry suppliers and related organizations as Associate Members.
EEI - Edison Electric Institute Inc. published this content on December 18, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on December 18, 2025 at 17:43 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]