For three years the Texas data center story has been a one-way ratchet: more megawatts requested, more campuses announced, more capital committed, and a grid operator that kept raising its own forecast. This week the ratchet caught. On May 12, Hill County commissioners voted 3-2 to freeze new data center construction in unincorporated areas for a year — the first Texas county to do it. Two days later came a report that a Chevron subsidiary wants a West Texas school district to hand it a nine-figure tax break for a gas plant built to power a single data center. The Senate Finance chair is calling the state's data center tax exemptions "unsustainable." None of this stopped the capital — Nvidia put $5.5 billion into a Texas miner the same week — but the friction is now real, organized, and on the record.
The through-line: there is a widening gap between what data center developers are promising and what counties, regulators, and the grid will actually absorb. ERCOT itself has said as much. The deals below are this week's evidence on both sides of that gap.
"We Don't Want It in Our Community": Hill County Freezes the Land Rush
On Tuesday, Hill County commissioners voted 3-2 to impose a one-year moratorium on new data center construction in unincorporated parts of the county — the first Texas county to pull that lever. The trigger was a proposed 300-acre campus in north Hillsboro tied to Dallas-based Provident Data Centers, which already runs nine US facilities, four of them in Texas. More than 100 residents packed the commissioners' meeting to object over water draw, noise, and grid strain.
County Judge Justin Brassell was blunt about what comes next: he expects lawsuits from developers "and perhaps the state as well," and framed the pause as a guardrail on a "land rush." He is probably right about the state. Houston Senator Paul Bettencourt, who passed a 2025 bill restricting municipal moratoriums, has already asked Attorney General Ken Paxton to investigate counties that pass pauses. The same week, nearby Hood County weighed its own moratorium and rejected it. So the score is one county in, one county out, and an AG referral pending — which is to say the legal template for every rural Texas county gets written in the next few months.
The part worth sitting with: this is not NIMBY noise from a metro suburb. Hill County is rural, the kind of place the buildout was supposed to be welcome. When the friction shows up there, the friction is structural.
Chevron Wants West Texas Schoolkids to Subsidize a Data Center's Power Plant
A May 14 report laid out the filing: a Chevron subsidiary, Energy Forge One, has applied for a Texas school-district tax abatement worth potentially $227 million-plus over ten years for a gas-fired plant in West Texas built to serve a single data center. The likely tenant is Microsoft, though Chevron says no final agreement exists and insists the incentive covers only the power facility, not the data center itself. That distinction is doing a lot of work.
What makes this one notable is the precedent. The State Comptroller's office issued a recommendation supporting the application in late January — the first time the program has backed an abatement for a plant built solely to power a data center. School-district tax breaks were designed to land manufacturing plants and the payrolls that come with them. A behind-the-fence gas turbine serving one hyperscaler is a different animal, and the Comptroller just blessed it.
It arrives at an awkward moment. Senate Finance Chair Joan Huffman has called the state's roughly $1.3 billion a year in data center sales-tax breaks "extremely concerning" and "unsustainable," with an interim hearing set for July ahead of possible repeal legislation. Texas spent a decade competing to give this industry money. The argument now is whether it can afford to keep doing it.
Nvidia Writes the Check: $5.5 Billion Into a Texas Miner
The capital, for its part, did not get the memo about friction. On May 7, Nvidia announced a two-part deal with IREN — the Bitcoin miner that has spent the past year recasting itself as an AI host — pairing a potential $2.1 billion equity investment with a $3.4 billion, five-year managed cloud contract for Nvidia's own internal AI workloads. Call it $5.5 billion. The hardware rolls out through 2026 at IREN's 750 MW campus in Childress, Texas, where the company is building liquid-cooled halls for a 200 MW critical IT load.
Read the structure, not the press release. Nvidia is moving downstream to lock up guaranteed compute capacity for itself, and it is using a former miner's Texas land and power position to do it. That is the miner-to-AI pivot graduating from "we signed a tenant" to "the chip vendor is now our anchor investor." Expect Hut 8, Bitfarms, and Cipher to chase the same template — I flagged Hut 8's $9.8 billion tenant comp two weeks ago, and this is the next rung up the ladder.
For a sense of how committed the sector is to leaving Bitcoin behind: MARA reported Q1 on May 11 with a $1.26 billion net loss, having sold 15,100 BTC for about $1.1 billion, and management stated flatly that it is "no longer a Bitcoin miner." When the companies say it themselves, believe them.
GE Vernova and Blue Energy Bet on "Gas-Plus-Nuclear" — One Site, Two Fuels, 2.5 GW
On May 5, GE Vernova and nuclear startup Blue Energy announced a 2.5 GW "gas-plus-nuclear" power station in Texas, designed to feed a data center campus from a single site. The plan pairs GE Vernova Hitachi BWRX-300 small modular reactors with GE 7HA.02 gas turbines on a "gas-to-nuclear bridge": gas energizes first — roughly 1 GW by 2030 — then nuclear ramps to about 1.5 GW by 2032.
The partners hold a turbine slot reservation for two 7HA.02 units in 2029, target a final investment decision in 2027, plan early site works in Texas this year, and intend to file for an NRC construction permit in 2027, aiming for roughly 48 months to power through offsite prefabrication. Whether the nuclear half arrives on that schedule is the open question — SMR timelines have a habit of slipping right. But the gas half is real and near-term.
Notice what this shares with the Chevron plant: generation purpose-built beside the data center, not added to the shared ERCOT grid. Two announcements in one week of multi-hundred-megawatt plants whose entire reason for existing is one customer behind the fence. The grid is increasingly not the power source — it is the thing the power source sits next to.
175 MW Now, 2.1 GW Later: The Gap Between Promised and Real
If you want the whole tension in a single project, look at Lufkin. Developer Amp Z is building a campus on the former Southland Paper Mill site in Angelina County, East Texas — about 1,041 acres, with room to expand to 4,000. The capacity trajectory: 55 MW grid-connected today, 175 MW by the end of 2026, 1.1 GW by 2028, and a total of 2.1 GW with a gigawatt of on-site self-generation by 2029.
Every one of those numbers past the first is a promise. And ERCOT has been unusually candid that the promises do not all come true — the grid operator told the PUCT this spring it has "concerns with using the preliminary load forecast" precisely because so many large-load projects will not materialize on time, at full scale, or at all. CEO Pablo Vegas told the House State Affairs Committee in early May that ERCOT is tracking about 410,000 MW of interconnection requests, 87% of them data centers. Nobody — least of all ERCOT — thinks all of that gets built.
That is the gap the county commissioners and the Senate Finance chair are reacting to. Developers underwrite the 2.1 GW headline. Communities and regulators have started underwriting the 175 MW that is actually under construction. Both can be right, and the distance between them is where the next two years of Texas energy politics will be fought.
What to Watch Next Week
Paxton's response to Bettencourt. Whether the AG opens an investigation into Hill County — and any other county pause — sets the legal template for every rural Texas county now weighing a moratorium.
The ERCOT board vote on Batch Zero, June 1. The large-load interconnection framework cleared PRS and ROS earlier this month; the June 1 board vote and the targeted summer effective date are the next hard dates. No change since last issue — watch for one.
The Energy Forge One abatement decision. Whether the school district actually approves Chevron's tax break would cement the precedent of public subsidy for data-center-only power plants.
Huffman's Senate Finance interim hearing prep. The witness list and any draft repeal language for the data center sales-tax exemption should start surfacing ahead of the July hearing.
Copycat county moratoriums — and the lawsuits. Hood County said no, but other exurban counties are studying pauses, and Hill County is openly bracing for developer litigation. The first suit filed tells you how this fight gets resolved.
Disclaimer: The Grid Report is Barrio Energy's market intelligence product. Nothing here is investment advice, and Andi is not your broker. Links go to primary sources wherever possible; form your own view.