U.S. Department of Energy

government

Last mentioned: Mar 24, 2026

Timeline

  1. Phase 1 Groundbreaking

    Scheduled start for the first 1GW of data center capacity and supporting infrastructure.

  2. Replenishment Review

    Governments will begin assessing timelines to refill depleted strategic reserves.

  3. Regulatory Integration

    Anticipated alignment of state environmental policies with the new nuclear guidelines.

  4. Peak Market Impact

    Anticipated period where the highest volume of released oil reaches physical markets.

  5. Environmental Review

    Commencement of impact assessments for on-site natural gas power generation.

  6. Site Feasibility Phase

    Expected commencement of technical evaluations for potential nuclear deployment sites.

  7. Initial Tranche

    The first phase of oil sales from strategic reserves is expected to begin.

  8. Framework Announcement

    Louisiana officials announce the Nuclear Framework and $45M in federal support.

  9. Project Announcement

    U.S. DOE officially announces the 10GW partnership with SoftBank and AEP Ohio.

  10. Official Announcement

    Nations announce the coordinated release of 400 million barrels.

Stories mentioning U.S. Department of Energy 5

market-trends Neutral

Trump Admin Unveils 10GW AI Data Center & Gas Power Hub at Ohio Uranium Site

The U.S. Department of Energy has partnered with SoftBank and AEP Ohio to transform a decommissioned uranium enrichment site into a 10-gigawatt AI data center complex powered by new natural gas plants. This project represents a massive scale-up in domestic AI infrastructure and a strategic pivot toward gas-fired baseload power to meet surging tech demands.

3 sources
Climate Policy Bearish

Colorado and Environmental Groups Sue DOE Over 'Illegal' Coal Plant Mandate

The State of Colorado and a coalition of environmental advocacy groups have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Energy, challenging a federal order that mandates the continued operation of coal-fired power plants slated for retirement. The plaintiffs argue the order is an illegal overreach that violates state sovereignty and federal administrative law.

2 sources

About U.S. Department of Energy coverage

This page surfaces every story mentioning U.S. Department of Energy across our climate coverage. We track each entity's appearance over time so readers can trace how the narrative evolves — which developments are isolated incidents, which build into longer arcs, and which reframe how operators in the space think about the entity. Story selection uses the same multi-source verification gate applied across the rest of our coverage.

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