US gas demand could grow by 25 Bcf/d (708mn m³/d) by 2030 due to both data centers expansions and LNG exports, according to East Daley Analytics senior director Jack Weixel.
Surging demand for gas-powered electricity from artificial intelligence (AI) data centers will likely grow demand by 5 Bcf/d by 2030, Weixel said today at the Midcontinent LDC Gas Forum in Chicago, Illinois. That matches the 4-8 Bcf/d AI-spurred growth estimated by ConocoPhillips senior market analyst James Pearson, who spoke earlier in the day at the forum.
While predicting the exact gas demand growth that will be driven by AI is a challenge, Pearson said he expected AI would be a "big driver of electricity demand going forward."
But the demand growth caused by AI in the next five years will be small compared to the anticipated growth of LNG export needs, according to Weixel. LNG projects that have already reached a final investment decision (FID), such as the Golden Pass project on the Texas/Louisiana border, the Corpus Christi stage 3 expansion, Plaquemines and Port Arthur projects, are currently expected to add 15.7 Bcf/d of demand by the mid-2030s.
Demand will grow by an additional 4 Bcf/d once several projects reach FID as expected in the next year, Weixel said, including the Delfin, Cameron and Altamira LNG export projects.
Weixel's analysis echoes that of the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), which has consistently forecast significantly higher gas prices in 2026 and onward due to growing demand in its monthly [Short-Term Energy Outlook](https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2708132).

