West Virginia embraces the data center boom

By Adam Aton | 04/10/2026 06:43 AM EDT

Gov. Patrick Morrisey signed legislation Thursday aimed at transforming the state into a powerhouse for the energy-hungry facilities.

West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey speaks during a 2025 news conference in Washington.

West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey speaks during a 2025 news conference in Washington. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

A new West Virginia law aims to boost the state’s coal and natural gas sectors while more than tripling its electricity generation capacity to 50 gigawatts by 2050.

The measure, signed Thursday by Republican Gov. Patrick Morrisey, is designed to turn West Virginia into an energy hub for the data center industry. By sending more electricity to the regional grid and leveraging his state’s relatively lax regulations, Morrisey and his allies are looking to lure data centers to the state, as well as power those beyond its borders.

“We know there’s virtually unlimited need for energy in our country,” Morrisey said at a bill signing of H.B. 5381. “PJM and our grid operators, they’re starving for states to step up and take the lead. And that’s what West Virginia is doing.”

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The new law calls for the state’s Office of Energy to produce rolling five-year plans to keep the state’s existing coal-fired power plants operating through 2050, while also developing new “baseload” energy powered by gas, nuclear, geothermal and hydrogen.

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