Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot
    Campbell’s promises its soups are not made with 3D printed meat

    Campbell’s promises its soups are not made with 3D printed meat

    November 25, 2025
    Apple TV is over half off for six months during Black Friday

    Apple TV is over half off for six months during Black Friday

    November 25, 2025
    Warner Music Group partners with Suno to offer AI likenesses of its artists

    Warner Music Group partners with Suno to offer AI likenesses of its artists

    November 25, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » The Big-Tech Clean Energy Crunch Is Here
    Business

    The Big-Tech Clean Energy Crunch Is Here

    News RoomBy News RoomJune 5, 20244 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    The Big-Tech Clean Energy Crunch Is Here

    Big Tech’s appetite for energy is just about visible from the east coast of Scotland. Some 12 miles out to sea sits a wind farm, where each of the 60 giant turbines has blades roughly the length of an American football field. The utility companies behind the Moray West project had promised the site would be capable of generating enough electricity to power 1.3 million homes once completed. That was before Amazon stepped in.

    In January, Amazon announced it had struck a deal to claim more than half the site’s 880 megawatts of output, part of its ongoing attempt to slake its unquenchable thirst for power. As the world’s biggest companies race to build the infrastructure necessary to enable artificial intelligence, even remote Scottish wind farms are becoming indispensable.

    In Europe last year, $79.4 million was spent on new data center projects, according to research firm Global Data. Already in 2024, there are signs that demand is accelerating. Today Microsoft announced a $3.2 billion bet on Sweden data centers. Earlier this year, the company also said it would double its data center footprint in Germany, while also pledging a $4.3 billion data center investment for AI infrastructure in France. Amazon announced a network of data centers in the state of Brandenburg as part of a $8.5 billion investment in Germany, later dedicating another $17.1 billion to Spain. Google said it would spend $1.1 billion on its data center in Finland to drive AI growth.

    As the tech giants rush to build more data centers, behind the scenes there is panic around how to power them. Microsoft, Meta and Google all plan to be net zero before 2030, while logistics-heavy Amazon has targeted 2040. In pursuit of that aim, the past decade has seen those companies hoover up renewable energy contracts with wind or solar companies. But all these projects rely on electricity grids, which are buckling under increased demand for clean energy. That’s forcing the tech giants to think about their energy-intensive futures and consider how they might operate their own off-grid power empires, outside the system.

    “There is a recognition that as power demand increases, the industry will have to find alternative energy sources,” says Colm Shorten, senior director of data center strategy at real estate services company JLL, explaining that server farms are increasingly looking for “behind-the-wire” power supply, whether that’s gas or diesel generators or more innovative technology such as green hydrogen.

    Data centers need power for two primary purposes. The first is to power the chips that enable computers to run algorithms or power video games. The second is to cool the servers, to stop them from overheating and cutting out. Initiatives such as using liquid to cool the chips instead of air are expected to make modest energy savings. But forecasts still expect data centers’ demand for power to as much as double by 2026, according to the International Energy Association, thanks in part to the demands of artificial intelligence.

    For the past five years, tech companies have been on an increasingly frenzied shopping spree for renewable contracts known as power purchase agreements (PPAs), which can enable data center operators to reserve power from a wind farm or solar site before the projects have even been built. In Denmark, there are solar farms paid for by Meta. In Norway, there are wind farms bankrolled by Google. As early adopters of these types of deals, tech companies have helped fuel Europe’s now-thriving PPA market, says Christoph Zipf, spokesperson at WindEurope. This month, Microsoft struck the world’s biggest renewables energy deal, signing a $10 billion contract for clean power across Europe and the US.

    Yet renewables still need to run through the electricity grid, which is becoming a bottleneck—especially in Europe, as a surge of renewable producers try to connect to feed green transition demand across a multitude of sectors. “We’re going to run into energy constraints,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg predicted on a podcast in April. At Davos this year, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman also warned that the status quo was not going to be able to provide AI with the power it needed to advance. “There’s no way to get there without a breakthrough,” he said at a Bloomberg event.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleThe Nintendo Switch OLED is $35 off at Woot on a one-day deal
    Next Article AI Is Your Coworker Now. Can You Trust It?

    Related Posts

    Nvidia CEO Dismisses Concerns of an AI Bubble. Investors Remain Skeptical

    Nvidia CEO Dismisses Concerns of an AI Bubble. Investors Remain Skeptical

    November 25, 2025
    Google DeepMind Hires Former CTO of Boston Dynamics as the Company Pushes Deeper Into Robotics

    Google DeepMind Hires Former CTO of Boston Dynamics as the Company Pushes Deeper Into Robotics

    November 24, 2025
    Kids in China Are Using Bots and Engagement Hacks to Look More Popular on Their Smartwatches

    Kids in China Are Using Bots and Engagement Hacks to Look More Popular on Their Smartwatches

    November 24, 2025
    The Biggest AI Companies Met to Find a Better Path for Chatbot Companions

    The Biggest AI Companies Met to Find a Better Path for Chatbot Companions

    November 21, 2025
    The US Needs an Open Source AI Intervention to Beat China

    The US Needs an Open Source AI Intervention to Beat China

    November 21, 2025
    Trump Takes Aim at State AI Laws in Draft Executive Order

    Trump Takes Aim at State AI Laws in Draft Executive Order

    November 21, 2025
    Our Picks
    Apple TV is over half off for six months during Black Friday

    Apple TV is over half off for six months during Black Friday

    November 25, 2025
    Warner Music Group partners with Suno to offer AI likenesses of its artists

    Warner Music Group partners with Suno to offer AI likenesses of its artists

    November 25, 2025
    4 People Indicted in Alleged Conspiracy to Smuggle Supercomputers and Nvidia Chips to China

    4 People Indicted in Alleged Conspiracy to Smuggle Supercomputers and Nvidia Chips to China

    November 25, 2025
    You can grab two months of Paramount Plus with Showtime for .99 a month

    You can grab two months of Paramount Plus with Showtime for $2.99 a month

    November 25, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Perplexity says its AI personal shopper ‘puts you first’ News

    Perplexity says its AI personal shopper ‘puts you first’

    By News RoomNovember 25, 2025

    Perplexity is ramping up its AI shopping experience going into the holiday season, just like…

    Wyze’s new security camera watches your yard from inside your home

    Wyze’s new security camera watches your yard from inside your home

    November 25, 2025
    Apple’s AirPods 4 are on sale starting at just  for Black Friday

    Apple’s AirPods 4 are on sale starting at just $69 for Black Friday

    November 25, 2025
    Arturia’s AstroLab 37 crams 44 synths into a tiny keyboard

    Arturia’s AstroLab 37 crams 44 synths into a tiny keyboard

    November 25, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.