The rapid growth of artificial intelligence globally will cause a surge in electricity demands that will initially be met by fossil fuels, at least until nuclear power becomes the obvious solution, according to Dale Klein,
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.
MIT Nuclear Science and Engineering Professor Koroush Shirvan claims energy intensive Artificial Intelligence will require electricity that is “always on”, afforded by nuclear power.
The rise of artificial intelligence will drive a surge in electricity demand that’ll initially be met by fossil fuels, before nuclear replaces that source, the head of a body advising Japan’s top utility said.
The surge in artificial intelligence (AI) has led many companies to urgently reassess their energy strategies. These companies, along with several countries, have also committed t
The convergence of AI and nuclear energy brings unique risks, especially when AI moves from a passive tool to an autonomous participant.
Meta is turning to nuclear energy to power its AI ambitions with the release a request for proposals to partner with nuclear energy developers.
Meta's extensive development plans for a huge AI campus leveraging nuclear energy exemplify how the data center industry will focus on powering its future.
Japan's restart of the Shimane nuclear reactor, coupled with tech giants' increasing interest in nuclear power, signals a global shift towards nuclear energy as a solution to rising energy demands and a sustainable future.
While a 33% decline for a stock would normally scare most investors off, the technical picture for NuScale suggests that this is the time to consider buying the stock on its recent weakness. Shares of NuScale are trading just above $20. That price has strong support potential for the stock for two reasons.
Meta said it's targeting 1 to 4 gigawatts of new nuclear generation capacity to be delivered starting in the early 2030s.
Across the U.S. and worldwide, energy demand is soaring as data centers work to support the wide and growing use of artificial intelligence.