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Energy consumption has started to rise, in part thanks to the increased use of artificial intelligence (AI) applications. AI training and inference put computer servers through their paces and are very energy-intensive. As AI models advance, the need for computing power and the energy needed to supply it are also increasing. To help fulfill that increased energy consumption, electricity suppliers are turning to natural gas to provide it.

One sector that looks set to benefit from this trend is pipeline operators that transport natural gas. Let’s look at four pipeline stocks that look like no-brainer buys in this energy-hungry environment.

Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB) is a leader in natural gas infrastructure and owns what is arguably the most valuable natural gas pipeline in the country: Transco. This pipeline transports natural gas from Appalachia, home of the prolific Marcellus and Utica basins, to energy demand centers in the Southeast and Gulf Coast, which also happens to be the country’s liquified natural gas (LNG) transport hub.

With Transco, Williams is well positioned to benefit from both increasing power demand stemming from data centers as well as any increased LNG demand. In addition, the pipeline is so well situated that there were nine expansion projects linked to Transco with in-service dates beginning in the second half of 2024 and going out to 2029. This is a pipeline that just keeps giving.

The company is looking for 2025 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) to be between $7.2 billion and $7.6 billion, up from a range of $7 billion to $7.15 billion in 2024. It then expects to grow its EBITDA at a more than 7% compound annual growth rate over the next five years thereafter.

Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI) has the largest natural gas pipeline systems in the U.S. stretching 66,000 miles and helping transport about 40% of the natural gas produced in the country. Meanwhile, nearly 90% of its natural gas pipeline contracts are “take or pay,” which means it gets paid whether customers use their pipeline capacity or not. Overall, about 64% of the company’s adjusted EBITDA comes from services related to natural gas.

Given Kinder’s large natural gas system, it should be little surprise that the company is starting to see more natural gas project opportunities. On its last earnings conference call, management said it has “never seen a macro environment so rich with opportunities for incremental build-out of natural gas infrastructure,” crediting the data center buildout, LNG export demand, and natural gas exports to Mexico for its outlook.

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