We have received text from H.R. 9372: Data Infrastructure Energy Measurement and Standards Act. This bill was received on 2026-06-18, and currently has 2 cosponsors.
Here is a short summary of the bill:
This bill would direct the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), working with the Department of Energy, to study and develop better ways to measure how much energy and water data centers use. It focuses on data centers broadly, including the energy use tied to artificial intelligence training and inference as well as other compute-heavy tasks.
What the bill would require
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Run a research program to improve how data center energy and water use is measured.
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Develop or identify best practices, definitions, methods, procedures, and technical standards for measuring and reporting that use.
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Study different kinds of data center workloads, including AI workloads, and how they affect total energy and water consumption.
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Consider how power use changes over time, including on-site power generation, grid-connected generation, and energy not sent to the grid.
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Account for differences in data center design, such as servers, storage, networking, cooling systems, power distribution, and backup power.
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Look at how location, climate, and other local factors affect electricity demand.
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Study what data is needed to improve energy and water demand forecasting, including gaps in data collection, public and private data availability, and researcher access.
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Support standardized metrics and data-sharing methods that could help researchers and stakeholders better forecast energy and water demand.
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Coordinate with the Energy Department to manage and archive the data appropriately and encourage sharing at the federal, state, academic, and industry levels where practical.
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Work with international partners and standards organizations to keep measurement standards aligned globally.
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Consult with industry, academics, nonprofits, standards groups, civil society, and federal agencies during the work.
Reporting and funding
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NIST would have to brief Congress on the program within one year of enactment and again within two years.
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The bill authorizes $10 million per year for fiscal years 2027 through 2029.
Who would be affected
The bill does not directly regulate data centers or require immediate reporting by private companies, but it could affect companies that build, operate, supply, or rely heavily on data centers by pushing toward new measurement standards and data practices.
Relevant Companies
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META
— Large operator of data centers that support its digital services and AI workloads; may need to adapt to new measurement or reporting standards.
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GOOGL
— Operates extensive data center infrastructure for cloud and AI services; could be affected by new energy and water measurement standards.
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AMZN
— Through AWS, operates major data center facilities and may be affected by standards for measuring and reporting resource use.
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MSFT
— Runs large-scale data centers for cloud computing and AI; could be impacted by standardized measurement and forecasting efforts.
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ORCL
— Operates cloud data centers and could be affected by evolving measurement and reporting practices.
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AMD
— Sells chips used in data centers and AI systems; indirect effects could come through changing data center efficiency and workload measurement practices.
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NVDA
— Supplies GPUs widely used in AI and data center workloads; may be indirectly affected if measurement standards influence data center design and optimization.
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INTC
— Supplies processors and other data center hardware; could face indirect effects from standards that shape data center energy-use reporting and infrastructure choices.
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DUK
— Electric utility with significant data center load exposure in some service areas; improved forecasting standards could affect planning and demand estimation.
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NEE
— Utility and energy infrastructure company that may be indirectly affected by data center power-demand forecasting and siting trends.
Representative Suhas Subramanyam Bill Proposals
Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Representative Suhas Subramanyam:
- H.R.9372: To direct the Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop best practices for measuring data center energy use, study data availability for the purpose of improving energy demand forecasting capabilities, and for other purposes.
- H.R.9371: To require disclosure when personalized algorithmic pricing is used, and for other purposes.
- H.R.9205: Protect Every Preschooler Act of 2026
- H.R.9204: Gun Safety Innovation Opportunity Act of 2026
- H.R.8712: Uyghur Forced Labor Disclosure Act
- H.R.8711: Data Infrastructure Risk Reduction Act
You can track bills proposed by Representative Suhas Subramanyam on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Subramanyam.
Representative Suhas Subramanyam Net Worth
Quiver Quantitative estimates that Representative Suhas Subramanyam is worth $2.3M, as of June 26th, 2026. This is the 250th highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.
Subramanyam has approximately $1.0M invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.
You can track Representative Suhas Subramanyam's net worth on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Subramanyam.
2026 Virginia's 10th Congressional District Election
There has been approximately $5,419,010 of spending in Virginia's 10th congressional district elections over the last two years, per our estimates.
Approximately $214,207 of this has been from outside spending by PACs and Super PACs.
The rating for this race is currently "Solid D".
You can track this election on our matchup page for the 2026 Virginia's 10th congressional district election.
This article is not financial advice. See Quiver Quantitative's disclaimers for more information.
Read full article here »
New Bill: Representative Suhas Subramanyam introduces H.R. 9372: Data Infrastructure Energy Measurement and Standards Act
We have received text from H.R. 9372: Data Infrastructure Energy Measurement and Standards Act. This bill was received on 2026-06-18, and currently has 2 cosponsors.
Here is a short summary of the bill:
This bill would direct the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), working with the Department of Energy, to study and develop better ways to measure how much energy and water data centers use. It focuses on data centers broadly, including the energy use tied to artificial intelligence training and inference as well as other compute-heavy tasks.
What the bill would require
Reporting and funding
Who would be affected
The bill does not directly regulate data centers or require immediate reporting by private companies, but it could affect companies that build, operate, supply, or rely heavily on data centers by pushing toward new measurement standards and data practices.
Relevant Companies
Representative Suhas Subramanyam Bill Proposals
Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Representative Suhas Subramanyam:
You can track bills proposed by Representative Suhas Subramanyam on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Subramanyam.
Representative Suhas Subramanyam Net Worth
Quiver Quantitative estimates that Representative Suhas Subramanyam is worth $2.3M, as of June 26th, 2026. This is the 250th highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.
Subramanyam has approximately $1.0M invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.
You can track Representative Suhas Subramanyam's net worth on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Subramanyam.
2026 Virginia's 10th Congressional District Election
There has been approximately $5,419,010 of spending in Virginia's 10th congressional district elections over the last two years, per our estimates.
Approximately $214,207 of this has been from outside spending by PACs and Super PACs.
The rating for this race is currently "Solid D".
You can track this election on our matchup page for the 2026 Virginia's 10th congressional district election.
This article is not financial advice. See Quiver Quantitative's disclaimers for more information.
Read full article here »