Google´s electricity use surges as data centers and emissions grow

Google´s data center power consumption has doubled since 2020, driving the tech giant to seek clean solutions as Artificial Intelligence and other services fuel mounting demand.

Google has unveiled two notable developments in its energy strategy: an agreement to purchase electricity from a planned fusion power plant and a new environmental report highlighting a dramatic rise in its electricity consumption. The fusion deal involves Commonwealth Fusion Systems, with Google committing to buy 200 megawatts of power from the company´s forthcoming Arc plant in Virginia—representing half the facility´s proposed capacity. However, this plant is not yet operational and will hinge on the successful completion of preliminary projects, with the first demonstration reactor expected to finish construction outside Boston by 2026.

At the same time, Google´s latest environmental data underscores surging energy demands, particularly from its expanding data centers. Since 2020, Google´s electricity use from these centers has doubled, now exceeding 30 terawatt-hours annually—approaching the entire consumption of a country like Ireland. Overall emissions are up more than 50% since 2019, with a 6% increase in the last year alone. These trends pose challenges for Google´s goal of reaching net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by the decade´s end, even as the company invests heavily in advanced renewable energy, nuclear, and geothermal technologies.

The exact contribution of Artificial Intelligence to this energy spike remains unclear, as Google does not disclose granular data on how much these technologies account for the growth. Company representatives have acknowledged that, beyond Artificial Intelligence, rising electricity needs stem from Google Cloud, YouTube, and core services like Search. The lack of transparency highlights a wider issue across the tech sector: companies should be more forthcoming about the energy demands of Artificial Intelligence. With Google´s climate targets under strain and power needs surging industry-wide, increased openness and accountability over energy use—alongside novel clean energy deals—will be key to sustainable progress moving forward.

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