Exxon announced this week that it’s planning to build a power plant for data centers, reflecting just how much electricity tech companies expect they’ll need in the coming decade. According to one estimate, nearly half of new AI data centers might not have enough power by 2027.
H eating and lighting buildings requires a vast amount of energy: 18% of all global energy consumption, according to the International Energy Agency. Contributing to the problem is the fact that many buildings’ HVAC systems are outdated and slow to respond to weather changes, which can lead to severe energy waste.
Data center emissions have tripled since 2018. As more complex AI models like OpenAI’s Sora see broad release, those figures will likely go through the roof.
Douglas McIntyre, editor-in-chief of Climate Crisis 24/7, explains how Google, following in the paths of companies like Microsoft and NVIDIA, is heavily investing in AI data centers while attempting to reduce fossil fuel use.
By Abhishyant Kidangoor Satellite data have long told us where forests are and how they’re faring. Lidar, laser-based radar mounted on planes or satellites like the International Space Station, has helped us map forests in 3D.
The Delhi-based startup leverages AI to serve as a decarbonisation solutions provider, helping manufacturing organisations and logistics firms measure, manage, and reduce their carbon footprint.
Every time you use AI to write an email or ask a chatbot a question, it comes at a cost to the planet-one ton of carbon at a time. What is the carbon footprint of AI and how do we calculate it?
Explore how University of Arizona researchers are transforming climate feedback understanding by integrating AI and soil genomics into Earth system models.
A recent study presents a radiative transfer model-driven machine learning technique for retrieving carbon monoxide from the world's first hyperspectral Geostationary Interferometric Infrared Sounder (GIIRS) onboard Fengyun-4B (FY-4B) satellite,
To most of us, a power plant is a source of electricity. To Exxon Mobil Corp., it’s a machine that converts natural gas into money. And this is a propitious time for doing that. Exxon announced this week that it is getting into the electricity game — sort of.
Liquid cooling, renewable diesel, and a host of infrastructure changes make Amazon's cloud service four times more efficient than on-premise computing, the company explains at re:Invent.
In this edition of TechCrunch's AI newsletter, This Week in AI, we lay out our plan for a more concise dispatch.