Maine might soon be closed for business in this transformative AI economy as it could become the first state to temporarily ban new data centers.
Some lawmakers point to the facilities’ high energy use to justify the proposal. But don’t fall for it – the freeze takes the easy way out by curbing more demand instead of fixing the state policies that constrain Maine’s energy supply to meet more consumption.
This ban, which has passed the state Legislature and now sits on the governor’s desk, will be yet another example of the Left’s onerous regulations that risk holding back prosperity for Maine and across the country.
Maine would be better off if its lawmakers scrap this nonsensical proposal and focus on expanding the state’s energy supply by rolling back restrictive policies.
One such misguided policy is the Renewable Portfolio Standard that requires 90 percent of the electricity sold in Maine to come from renewable energy like wind and solar by 2040.
When the government heavily favors these intermittent technologies over others, it pushes more reliable energy out of the mix – but that’s the type of power that homes, businesses, and now AI data centers depend on.
Maine law also exempts certain wind and solar equipment from property taxes, making it artificially cheaper to choose renewable energy over more reliable ones. On top of that, it has set an arbitrary goal of building three gigawatts of offshore wind capacity by 2040.
While wind power works well in the winter, its output plunges in the summer months; and solar, which peaks in the summer, drops sharply in the winter. If the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine, Maine may go dark.
While giving preferential treatment to renewable energy, Maine effectively has a moratorium on nuclear energy. Yet, nuclear could play a key role in powering the state by providing reliable, around-the-clock electricity that is also carbon-free. Unfortunately, Maine has no nuclear power, with its only nuclear plant shutting down in 1997.
Legislators in Augusta have significant work ahead – reforming the state’s regulatory barrier for nuclear energy, repealing renewable policies that distort the electricity mix, and advancing other free market reforms to unleash Maine’s energy.
These energy reforms are important for Maine, given its lack of natural gas and coal reserves and in-state production. The state heavily depends on imported natural gas, which serves as its largest source of electricity generation followed by hydropower and other renewables. That reliance comes with risk as natural gas prices and, in turn, electricity prices, can swing on winter storms, global conflicts, and pipeline constraints.
However, instead of fixing flawed energy policies, state lawmakers are taking the easy route by curbing more energy demand through a temporary ban on data centers while overlooking their broader benefits.
While Maine might not be at the center of the AI boom, a ban would have vast economic repercussions. It would halt economic investment, send jobs and tax revenues to other states, and signal that it opted out of the AI industry. This ban would also set an anti-growth precedent in the U.S. as other states weigh similar restrictions.
Maine’s motto is Dirigo – “I lead.” But right now, the state is leading in overregulation. By moving to ban critical infrastructure for the AI economy, it risks setting itself and potentially other states down the wrong path.
It doesn’t have to be this way. Gov. Janet Mills should reject the proposed freeze, and Maine lawmakers should change course by embracing free market policies that expand energy access, support innovation, and position the Pine Tree State for a more prosperous future.