得州电网亮起警报:数据中心、加密货币矿场未通过电压测试


2026-06-05T16:53:23.668Z / 路透社

摘要

  • 多家大型数据中心、加密货币矿场在夏季用电高峰前未通过电网可靠性测试
  • 得州电力可靠性委员会(ERCOT)正在审查测试失败案例,并制定缓解方案,以防突然断电引发大规模停电
  • 监管机构正在收紧规则,确保相关设施在遭遇电压波动时不会断开连接

6月5日(路透社电)——据得州电网运营商消息,多家计划在夏季用电高峰前接入得州电力网的大型数据中心和加密货币矿场未通过关键可靠性测试,在用电季节性高峰来临之际,这加大了停电风险。

为人工智能和加密货币挖矿处理海量数据的数据中心快速扩张,正在给美国各地的电网带来压力。

路透社《电力升级》简报汇总了全球能源行业的所有重要资讯,点击此处订阅

与传统工业客户倾向于稳定、可预测地用电不同,数据中心的设计逻辑是在出现故障迹象时第一时间断开与电网的连接,以保护设备并维持服务运行。这使得它们成为本已因需求上升而承压的电网中一股不可预测、可能 destabilizing 的力量。

得州电力可靠性委员会(ERCOT)在5月21日的一份报告中表示,在一项测试大型用户如何应对常规电压波动的过程中,包括数据中心在内的四组未具名大型电力用户突然与得州电网断开连接。

当大型客户突然削减用电负荷时,可能会打破电网平衡,引发更大范围的停电。

负责得州大部分地区电力调度的ERCOT表示,该机构已审查了约20吉瓦的拟接入大型用户项目,其中包括8个总容量约3.9吉瓦、计划在7月1日前投产的项目。该机构称,通过对输电系统故障的模拟分析,已确认四组大型电力用户在特定故障条件下,可能各自触发超过5000兆瓦的负荷跳闸。

这类突然的用电负荷下降,相当于波士顿这样的大城市的用电量。

ERCOT表示,该机构正在审查测试失败案例,并制定方案以保护电网免受干扰。随着越来越多的数据中心和加密货币矿场接入电网,所谓的“电压穿越失败”已成为ERCOT董事会的首要任务。

自2023年以来,ERCOT已确认至少发生26起数据中心或加密货币挖矿设施因无法应对电力流动波动而突然断开电网的事件。

2022年12月,得州西部一座变电站的变压器故障导致近400家加密货币矿场、数据中心和油气生产设施在毫无预警的情况下断电。据ERCOT称,此次大规模断电造成近1700兆瓦的电力过剩,约占电网总需求的5%,并迫使112兆瓦的发电机组停机。

ERCOT和监管机构一直在收紧并网和性能要求,包括出台新规则,确保此类设施能够经受住电压和频率波动而不中断连接。

蒂姆·麦克劳克林 波士顿报道;桑吉夫·米格拉尼 编辑

Texas grid flags risks as data centers, crypto sites fail voltage tests

2026-06-05T16:53:23.668Z / Reuters

Summary

  • Several large data centers, crypto sites failed grid reliability tests ahead of summer peak
  • ERCOT reviewing failures, developing mitigation plans as abrupt disconnections risk outages
  • Regulators tightening rules to ensure facilities withstand voltage disturbances without disconnecting

June 5 (Reuters) – Several ​large data centers and crypto facilities planning to connect to the Texas power grid ahead of ‌peak summer demand have failed key reliability tests, raising the risk of power outages just as electricity use hits its seasonal high, according to the state grid operator.

The rapid expansion of data centers processing vast amounts of data for artificial intelligence and crypto mining is ​straining power grids across the United States.

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Unlike traditional industrial customers, which tend to draw electricity steadily and ​predictably, data centers are engineered to cut their connection to the grid at the first sign ⁠of trouble to protect their equipment and keep services running. That makes them an unpredictable and potentially destabilizing force ​on grids already under pressure from rising demand.

Four groups of unnamed large electricity users, including data centers, abruptly disconnected ​from the Texas grid during a test of how they would handle routine voltage disturbances, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) said in a report dated May 21.

When large customers abruptly cut their power use, it can knock the grid off balance and trigger wider ​outages.

ERCOT, which manages electricity for most of Texas, said it reviewed about 20 gigawatts of large customers seeking to connect ​to the system, including eight projects totaling roughly 3.9 gigawatts aiming to start up before July 1. It said it identified ‌four groups ⁠of large power users that could each trigger more than 5,000 megawatts of demand tripping under certain fault conditions, based on simulations of transmission system disturbances.

Those abrupt drops in demand were equivalent to the electricity consumption of a large city such as Boston.

ERCOT said it is reviewing the test failures and drawing up plans to protect the grid from ​disruptions. So-called voltage ride-through failures ​have become a top ⁠priority for ERCOT’s board as the risk grows with more data centers and crypto miners connecting to the grid.

Since 2023, ERCOT has identified at least 26 events in which ​data centers or crypto mining facilities have abruptly disconnected from the grid because they ​could not handle ⁠disturbances in the flow of electricity.

In December 2022, a failed transformer at a substation in west Texas caused nearly 400 crypto miners, data centers and oil and gas production facilities to unplug without warning. The mass disconnection produced a surplus of nearly ⁠1,700 ​megawatts of electricity, about 5% of the grid’s total demand, and forced ​112 megawatts of power generation to shut down, according to ERCOT.

ERCOT and regulators have been tightening interconnection and performance requirements, including new rules aimed ​at ensuring such facilities can ride through voltage and frequency disturbances without disconnecting.

Tim McLaughlin in Boston; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani

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