
How Interconnection Delays Put You at Risk as a Construction CFO
Grid connection delays have turned data center construction cash forecasting from a routine project management task into a critical financial control issue. For CFOs at general contracting firms, the real risk is not just a delayed energization date; it is the unmanaged cash exposure that builds when interconnection milestones slip, equipment commitments remain locked in, and billing schedules fall out of sync with actual field progress.
With power connection requests now carrying one- to three-year lead times, a construction cash forecast anchored to a static milestone quickly loses its value as a decision-making tool. When power delivery windows move by months or years, finance teams must have immediate visibility into how a delayed utility timeline strains working capital, increases credit line utilization, reduces covenant headroom, and limits bonding capacity.
Why Grid Interconnection Delays are a Construction Accounting Problem
The bottlenecks facing data center developers and general contractors are not isolated incidents; they reflect deeper constraints in the power and construction environment. Data from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s (LBNL) Queued Up report highlights the scale of the queue:
- Growing Backlogs: Nearly 2,600 gigawatts of generation and storage capacity were sitting in U.S. interconnection queues at the end of 2023.
- Stretched Timelines: The median duration from an initial interconnection request to commercial operation has climbed from under two years (for projects built between 2000–2007) to more than five years for projects completed recently.
Translating this to data center builds, EY-Parthenon notes that when new power supply and transmission construction are required, development and construction timelines frequently stretch to five to eight years.
According to Colliers’ Data Center Marketplace Report, global data center investment topped $580 billion in 2025, with build costs rising 47% year over year due to power-driven complexity. At the same time, more than $64 billion in U.S. projects have been delayed or canceled since 2023 due to community opposition, zoning constraints, and environmental reviews. As MSI/MOCA’s Sizing the Surge report concludes, traditional forecasting models cannot keep pace with this level of volatility.
Federal efforts are unlikely to offer immediate relief. While the Department of Energy’s $30 million program to fund AI-driven interconnection reviews is a positive step, it targets process efficiency rather than overall queue volume. CFOs cannot treat these initiatives as a near-term cure for projects currently waiting on power. For finance leaders, the grid bottleneck is a multi-year planning constraint to be managed, not a short-term obstacle that can be resolved quickly.
How Power Delays Damage Cash Flow, WIP, and Working Capital
Traditional construction forecasting relies on predictable inputs: the master schedule, committed costs, billing milestones, cost-to-complete, and expected receipt timing. On major data center builds, these inputs are constantly shifting.
When a utility milestone slips, downstream field work, billing events, and revenue recognition slide with it — but the contractor’s fixed obligations do not. Long-lead electrical equipment, subcontractor mobilization costs, and site management overhead continue to drain cash, while the next billable milestone moves further out.
This mismatch degrades cash conversion in three distinct ways:
- Pre-Contract Procurement Exposure: GCs routinely place purchase orders for main power transformers, medium-voltage switchgear, and backup generators months before prime contracts are finalized. On large hyperscale campuses, these commitments easily reach tens of millions of dollars. If these purchase orders are omitted from the active cash forecast, massive cash exposure remains invisible until the invoices arrive.
- Accrual and Commitment Pressures: An executed PO for a multi-million-dollar electrical package is a material obligation long before an invoice enters Accounts Payable. Each delay forces the controller’s team to manually adjust accruals, open commitments, and cost-code allocations during the close, increasing the risk that period-end financial reporting lags behind real-world commitments.
- WIP Schedule Distortion: Percentage-of-completion calculations often remain tied to operational milestones that have already drifted. This can cause the Work-in-Progress (WIP) schedule to overstate earned revenue, create underbillings, or understate remaining costs. Finance is then left explaining a cash trend to lenders and board members that does not match the formal balance sheet.
Where Static Forecasting Models Break Down
Many construction finance teams still reforecast on a rigid monthly or quarterly cycle using manual spreadsheet exports and project manager interviews. While this cadence may be sufficient when project variables are stable, it fails when a six-month utility delay fundamentally alters a project’s liquidity profile, billing cadence, and margins.
If your cash forecast is only rebuilt once a quarter, the figures presented to executives are likely obsolete before they are reviewed. The gap between the reported forecast and your actual cash position inevitably surfaces at the worst possible moment — during month-end close, during an unexpected credit line draw, or while fielding tough questions from a surety partner.
Scenario Planning for Interconnection Risk
No forecasting system can accelerate a utility provider’s timeline. What finance leaders can control is scenario discipline: the ability to model and quantify the balance-sheet impact of timeline shifts before they trigger a cash squeeze.
Instead of managing a single baseline schedule, finance teams must model baseline, six-month delay, and 12-month delay scenarios, with each iteration recalculating:
- Cash conversion cycles and actual receipt timing.
- Uninvoiced equipment commitments and near-term working capital demand.
- Credit line utilization and covenant headroom (such as debt service coverage and quick ratios).
- Available bonding capacity required to pursue the next project in the pipeline.
For a construction CFO, the goal is not to predict a single, perfect number; it is to establish a controlled range of cash outcomes that the executive team can use for capital allocation and transparent lender communication.
Automating the Forecast with Sage Intacct Planning
That level of scenario discipline is difficult to maintain when forecasts depend on disconnected spreadsheets and manual updates. Sage Intacct Planning provides a connected financial planning environment that integrates directly with core Sage Intacct accounting data — including your chart of accounts, historical actuals, budgets, and project dimensions.
For contractors managing multiple data center programs simultaneously, this direct connection allows finance to isolate cash exposure by project, client, entity, or cost category without rebuilding complex models from scratch. The result is faster reforecasting and a more defensible view of liquidity.
Additionally, Sage Copilot’s Finance Intelligence agent streamlines data retrieval. Instead of spending days exporting databases and cross-referencing spreadsheets to assess exposure across delayed programs, finance teams can run natural-language queries directly against Sage Intacct data:
“What is our current cash exposure on interconnection-delayed programs?”
This capability shifts the finance department from reactive data aggregation to proactive risk management, giving leadership the real-time insights needed for capital planning, joint-venture discussions, and lender updates.
Case Study Example
By connecting their planning environment to live actuals instead of manual spreadsheets, project controls firm Aegis Project Controls compressed their reforecasting cycle from quarterly to bi-weekly. This change enabled rapid scenario modeling and delivered a 5x increase in accounting efficiency.
The CFO Advantage: Turn Visibility into Capital Control
Grid interconnection timelines are not going to stabilize overnight, and the capital commitments required for long-lead equipment are only growing. In this environment, the competitive advantage belongs to finance teams whose systems flag the cash impact of a schedule change before it threatens liquidity, covenant headroom, or bonding capacity.
SWK Technologies helps construction businesses replace disconnected spreadsheets and manual forecasting processes with integrated financial planning technology. By connecting Sage Intacct Planning with core accounting and project data, finance teams can model changing timelines, assess cash exposure, and update forecasts more efficiently. Contact SWK Technologies to learn how Sage Intacct Planning can strengthen cash forecasting across your project portfolio.
