Energy Transfer LP has announced a long-term agreement with CloudBurst Data Centers, Inc., based in Denver, to supply natural gas to CloudBurst’s flagship AI-focused data center development in Central Texas. The deal marks Energy Transfer’s first commercial arrangement to directly supply natural gas to a data center.
Natural Gas Supply and Project Details
Energy Transfer will supply Oasis Pipeline to CloudBurst’s new data center facility near San Marcos, Texas with 450,000 MMBtu of daily natural gas supplies. The natural gas should generate up to 1.2 gigawatts of electricity to support the cloud’s data center beginning in the third quarter of 2026. The project is subject to CloudBurst obtaining a final investment decision later this year.
Energy Transfer’s Strategic Position
This deal sets the company strategically as the leading natural gas supplier to the data center industry. With over 105,000 miles of natural gas gathering and transportation pipelines along with storage facilities having a combined capacity of nearly 236 billion cubic feet, Energy Transfer is well-poised to meet the growing energy demands of the data centers and the power generation facilities.
Additionally, the company engages in discussions with various data center developers and anticipates this agreement will become the first of many for providing, storing, and moving natural gas all over the country.
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CloudBurst’s Executive Chair, Cynthia Thompson, said, “We are very excited about our close relationship with Energy Transfer and feel extremely confident in their ability to provide redundancy through their vast pipeline network and storage capacity.”
She added, “In addition, we will work closely with Energy Transfer to identify additional potential data center sites, on or close to their strategic natural gas pipeline network, using our proprietary site selection software.”
This agreement signifies a crucial step in CloudBurst’s efforts to expand its AI-focused data center operations and also supports the increasing demand for energy in the data center industry.