Silicon Valley Power outlines major system expansions, projects and affordability concerns

City Council / Authorities concurrent meeting (City of Santa Clara) ยท January 28, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Silicon Valley Power presented a biannual update covering system expansion projects (receiving stations, 115 kV line, 40 MW battery), resource procurement, predictive maintenance and security upgrades; council questions focused on undergrounding, data-center impacts and rate affordability. The council moved to note and file.

Silicon Valley Power (SVP) delivered its biannual update on Tuesday, describing a portfolio of system-expansion projects, new technology deployments and customer-facing programs as the utility prepares for rapid load growth.

SVP Director Nico Prokos said the utility is pursuing multiple receiving-station rebuilds (Northern Receiving Station and others), a 115 kV transmission project, and construction of a 40-megawatt battery. Prokos highlighted work underway at the Northern Receiving Station (NRS) with an estimated completion in mid-2028 and additional substations and capacity upgrades through 2029. Staff outlined operational improvements including a predictive maintenance program for generation and substations, a new outage-management system launched in late 2025, and enhanced substation security with video and access controls.

SVP also reviewed its resource pipeline: contracted renewables (solar and wind) coming online across 2026-2029, and a portfolio approach to meet a forecasted 15-year load projection. Prokos cited supply-chain and tariff pressures (noting a large transformer order subject to import tariffs) and a 22% vacancy rate in staffing as near-term risks.

Council members asked for more detail on how expansion costs are allocated, whether data centers were being differentiated, options to incentivize on-site generation for large customers, undergrounding and aesthetics of substations, and affordability for residential ratepayers. Staff said a cost-of-service study is scheduled for Q3 and that much of the revenue used to build reserves comes from large customers; they also confirmed programs to support multifamily electrification and new residential rebates are in development.

Public commenters asked the council to consider affordability and questioned whether residents were receiving a fair share of benefits from revenues generated by data centers. SVP staff said they will return with a cost-of-service study to clarify allocations and pursue customer-facing programs to broaden electrification supports.

The council voted to note and file the SVP update.