As demand for electricity surges alongside the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence, Texas is becoming a major hub for energy infrastructure, clean power development, and capital investment, according to Nasdaq executives and industry leaders.
Why is Texas becoming an AI energy hub?
The explosive growth of artificial intelligence and data centers has dramatically increased demand for reliable electricity, placing Texas at the center of the nation's next wave of energy development.
Companies developing geothermal, nuclear, and other carbon-free energy technologies have increasingly turned to public markets to finance projects that can power AI infrastructure.
In 2026 alone, Fervo Energy, X-Energy, and Hadron Energy all debuted on Nasdaq, each focused on delivering large-scale, reliable power for data centers and other energy-intensive industries.
What Nasdaq is saying
Rachel Racz, Senior Vice President of Listings and President of Nasdaq Texas, said the conversation surrounding energy has fundamentally changed.
Rachel Racz: "The last decade was all about the energy transition. Now all we're talking about is capacity, reliability, and scale."
Racz said Texas has become the focal point where energy infrastructure, capital markets, and AI development intersect.
Which companies are leading the trend?
Several newly public companies are developing technologies designed to meet growing electricity demand:
- Fervo Energy, headquartered in Houston, raised $1.89 billion after going public and uses advanced geothermal technology adapted from oil and gas drilling.
- X-Energy raised approximately $1.1 billion through its Nasdaq debut to expand deployment of its small modular nuclear reactors.
- Hadron Energy became the first publicly traded company focused on light-water micro-modular reactors capable of providing continuous carbon-free electricity.
The Bottom Line
As artificial intelligence drives demand for electricity, Texas is emerging as a national center for energy innovation, infrastructure investment, and capital markets. Industry leaders believe the state's combination of energy expertise, business climate, and access to investment capital positions it to play a leading role in powering the AI economy.

