AI is spurring a big expansion of high-voltage power lines. Landowners
and locals are fighting back
[March 09, 2026] By
MARC LEVY
SUGARLOAF, Pa. (AP) — For John Zola, the 40 acres were like a paradise:
apple orchards tucked into northern Pennsylvania's rolling hills, a
barn, meadows and more than enough land for four houses: one for himself
and his wife and each of his three adult children.
It’s been “hell,” however, since a contractor hired by the local power
utility knocked on Zola's door in late 2024 and informed him that it
planned to build a 500-kilovolt power line through his property.
The 240-foot metal towers would reach 10 times as high as the
century-old apple trees they'd plow through and loom over the Zolas'
homes and the basketball court and swimming pool where his grandchildren
play.
This line and others like it are being planned in accelerating numbers
in the United States to deliver power, sometimes across hundreds of
miles, to enormous data centers run by the world's biggest tech
companies.
Although advances in artificial intelligence are seen by President
Donald Trump as critical to the nation’s economic and national security,
their energy needs are threatening to overwhelm the power grid — and
people like Zola are caught in the middle.
The local utility, PPL, said it did everything it could to balance the
impact on people with its obligation to deliver electricity and protect
grid reliability. But to Zola, all they care about is money.
“They don’t look at whose lives they are destroying, whose property they
are destroying,” Zola said.

Big power lines, big data centers
These high-voltage power lines are the latest front line in the battle
over tech firms' massive operations.
Angry local opposition has sprouted against dozens of the behemoth data
centers amid fears of rising electricity costs and irreparable damage to
their communities.
Opponents of transmission projects are similarly motivated: they say the
lines are intruding on the sanctity of private land and threatening
long-lasting harm to sensitive public lands, farms, property values and
pristine waterways — all for electricity that they don’t think benefits
them.
Transmission projects have always faced challenges and yearslong
permitting processes, and two decades of relatively flat power demand
didn't inject much urgency.
But analysts say the grid remains inefficient, aging and, with demand
spiking, on the verge of causing widespread blackouts on the coldest or
hottest days. Utilities contend that any new transmission line — even
those driven primarily by large customers, like data centers or
industrial sites — benefits everyone by adding capacity to the grid.
Some members of Congress want to exclude lines from state or certain
environmental reviews, while some tech companies are trying to build
their own power plants, or next to one, in part to avoid a quagmire.
These transmission projects aren't local power lines on wooden poles.
Rather, these are lines on steel towers five or six times as tall,
carrying power in bulk across long distances.
Some — like the Sugarloaf project that could cross Zola's property —
require 200-foot-wide corridors.
Caught in the middle
Utility giants are forecasting that their spending growth will be driven
primarily by transmission projects, with transmission spending projected
to double to nearly $50 billion a year from 2019 to 2028.
But the expansion is eliciting opposition from landowners,
conservationists, local officials, consumer advocates and even states.

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A 235-kilovolt power line towers over farm buildings near where the
local power utility plans to build a 500-kilovolt power line on
towers as tall as 240 feet, March 4, 2026, in Sugarloaf, Pa. (AP
Photo/Marc Levy)
 In Texas' Hill Country, the Hill
Country Preservation Coalition sprang up against the construction of
the southernmost of three 765-kilovolt lines — the highest voltage
used in the United States — that Texas regulators commissioned to
cross the state in east-west “superhighway” corridors.
The coalition's founder, Jada Jo Smith, calls it a “Goliath” that
will be nearly impossible to defeat. To at least minimize the
damage, the coalition is pressing state regulators to adopt a
different, slightly longer path that follows existing highway
corridors.
“Why would you choose a route that would potentially harm our most
iconic rivers that we have left in the state of Texas?” Smith said.
‘These are real dollars’
Pennsylvania’s state consumer advocate, Darryl Lawrence, is
protesting a $1.7 billion proposed line spanning more than 200 miles
from West Virginia across half Pennsylvania.
He questions whether cheaper alternatives are available, whether the
data center demand it's designed to serve will truly materialize and
why grid operators want to import power into a state that, as a
large power producer, normally exports it.
West Virginians are also fighting a pair of proposed transmission
lines connecting coal-fired power plants there to northern Virginia,
home to the so-called “data center alley.”
In the Midwest grid territory, a $22 billion transmission package is
embroiled in a monthslong fight, as utility regulators in North
Dakota, Montana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana urge federal
regulators to block it.
“I think you may see more of those,” said Todd Snitchler, president
and CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association, which represents
independent power plant owners. “These are real dollars and
consumers are paying a lot of attention.”
The Indiana-based Midcontinent Independent System Operator told
federal regulators in a filing that the lines are necessary to
address growing demand from manufacturing and data centers, and that
the need for new power transmission “has never been greater.”

‘There’s no amount of money for me'
In eastern Pennsylvania, Amazon and other developers have so many
data center projects in the works that PPL projected its peak
electricity demand will more than triple by 2030.
PPL, which serves more than 1.5 million electric customers, argues
that the 12-mile Sugarloaf project will minimize disruptions by
reusing and expanding a power line corridor that once carried a
since-removed residential line, rather than establishing a new
corridor.
The utility has offered to pay property owners to access their land,
but landowners worry that, if they don't accept, PPL will go to
court to use eminent domain to force a settlement.
The new line would run perhaps 100 feet from where Zola's grandkids
sleep at night. In recent days, Zola said holdout landowners got
higher cash offers from PPL.
“My offer went from $17,000 to $85,000,” Zola said. “Just like that.
And there’s no amount of money for me. And when you come here,
you’ll understand why.”
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