Pennsylvania quietly reached a milestone this month that deserves more attention than it received.
With the latest distribution of Act 13 revenue, the Commonwealth has now returned more than $3.12 billion in impact fee payments to counties, municipalities, and state programs since the law took effect in 2012. This year’s distribution alone totaled nearly $244 million, driven by higher natural gas prices and an increase in new unconventional wells. (PA Environment Digest)
The numbers are impressive, but they tell only part of the story.
Most people remember why the impact fee was created. During the early years of the Marcellus Shale, rural roads designed for farm traffic suddenly carried drilling rigs, water tankers, sand trucks, and heavy equipment around the clock. Energy companies rebuilt roads through road-use agreements and infrastructure improvements, yet lawmakers recognized that repairing pavement alone would not address the long-term effects of hosting a major energy industry.
The drilling boom would eventually slow.
The producing field would not.
That distinction became the foundation of Act 13.
Unlike a traditional severance tax, which rises and falls with production, the impact fee recognized that unconventional wells continue to affect local communities long after drilling is complete. Producing wells require inspections, gathering systems, compressor stations, maintenance crews, emergency planning, environmental oversight, and public infrastructure. The relationship between the well and the community does not end when the drilling rig leaves.
In other words, Act 13 was written for the life of the field, not simply the life of the drilling boom. The fee structure is based on the age of qualifying unconventional wells and natural gas prices, creating a long-term revenue stream tied to the continued presence of the industry. (Babst Calland – Attorneys at Law)
That history matters because Pennsylvania now finds itself facing another industrial transformation.
Artificial intelligence has created an unprecedented demand for electricity. Nearly every proposal for a large-scale data center begins with the same question: Where will the power come from?
For Pennsylvania, the answer increasingly points back to natural gas.
Much of the current discussion has focused on attracting data centers, but that may be looking at the issue from the wrong direction. Pennsylvania’s greatest advantage may not be owning the servers. It may be supplying the energy that allows those servers to operate.
There is an old observation from the California Gold Rush- don’t mine gold, sell supplies to mine gold. The same principle may apply today. Pennsylvania does not need to become Silicon Valley to benefit from artificial intelligence. It already possesses one of the world’s largest supplies of low-cost natural gas.
If AI accelerates electricity demand as projected, the effects will extend well beyond data centers themselves. Existing wells become more valuable. Pipeline expansion becomes easier to justify. Gathering systems remain active. Additional drilling locations become economic. Service companies, equipment manufacturers, pipeline contractors, and local businesses all benefit from stronger long-term demand.
That brings the conversation back to Act 13.
The law was never simply about collecting revenue. It acknowledged that communities hosting a long-lived industry should share in the economic value that industry creates. Fourteen years later, more than $3.12 billion has demonstrated that the model works.
As Pennsylvania debates the next generation of energy-intensive industries, the more useful question may not be whether data centers create opportunity.
The better question is whether Act 13 already provided the blueprint for how the Commonwealth should think about industries whose economic benefits—and local impacts—will be measured not in months, but in decades.
