A.I. Data Centers Are Emitting Nearly as Much Greenhouse Gases As Commercial Airlines
Data centers, the nondescript facilities that dot the U.S., have for decades housed the computing equipment needed to run IT systems. The A.I. boom has transformed these facilities into priceless amenities that play a critical role in powering A.I. models. But at the same time, they have also increasingly contributed to environmental pollution.
Data centers in the U.S. produced at least 106 million metric tons of CO2 emissions last year, which tripled the emission level of 2018 and accounted for more than 2 percent of the nation’s carbon emissions from energy consumption last year, according to a recent study by public health researchers at Harvard University and UCLA. Data centers’ carbon emissions rival those of the domestic commercial airline industry, which produces around 131 million metric tons of CO2 annually, according to MIT Technology Review, which first reported the findings.
The findings shine a light on the environmental impact of A.I., which consumes mass amounts of energy. A ChatGPT query, for example, uses nearly 10 times more electricity than a Google (GOOGL) search, according to Goldman Sachs researchers. Much of this energy is consumed by data centers, which train and deploy A.I. models and accounted for 4 percent of the nation’s total electricity use last year—a figure that could more than double by 2030 as Big Tech companies continue to build these facilities.
A.I.’s hunger for powerful data centers has already “exacerbated the strain on electricity resources and triggered an unprecedented increase in energy demand and consumption,” according to the study, which analyzed the energy use and emissions of 2,132 data centers in the U.S., about 78 percent of the national’s total, between September of 2023 and this August. The U.S. is home to over a third of the world’s data centers.
Soaring emissions linked to A.I.-related data center use has caused Big Tech companies to fall “off the track with their sustainability pledges,” wrote the study’s authors. Google’s carbon emissions last year was 13 percent higher than the year prior. In the past four years, Microsoft (MSFT)’s emissions have surged approximately 29 percent.
Another cause for concern stems from the “cleanliness” of energy supplied to data centers in the past year. The carbon intensity of such energy is 48 percent higher than the national average, the study found. It also found that U.S. data centers are often located in geographical areas with rich carbon-intense energy sources. Fossil fuel-burning power plants accounted for 56 percent of the energy generated by these facilities, while an additional 16 percent came from coal power plants.
The remaining energy was generated by nuclear and renewable energy sources, which the tech industry looks to increasingly rely on. The industry-wide need for emission-free electricity has already kicked off a nuclear energy dealmaking frenzy amongst Big Tech companies. Google, Microsoft and Amazon (AMZN) have all formed nuclear energy partnerships in recent months.