Amazon, Google make dueling nuclear investments to power data centers
with clean energy
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[October 17, 2024] By
ALEXA ST. JOHN and JENNIFER McDERMOTT
Amazon on Wednesday said that it was investing in small nuclear
reactors, coming just two days after a similar announcement by Google,
as both tech giants seek new sources of carbon-free electricity to meet
surging demand from data centers and artificial intelligence.
The plans come as the owner of the shuttered Three Mile Island nuclear
power plant said last month it plans to restart the reactor so tech
giant Microsoft can buy the power to supply its data centers. All three
companies have been investing in solar and wind technologies, which make
electricity without producing greenhouse gas emissions. Now they say
they need to go further in the search for clean electricity to meet both
demand and their own commitments to cut emissions.
Nuclear energy is a climate solution in that its reactors don’t emit the
planet-warming greenhouse gases that come from power plants that burn
fossil fuels, such as oil, coal and gas. The demand for power is surging
globally as buildings and vehicles electrify. People used more
electricity than ever last year, placing strain on electric grids around
the world. Much of the demand also comes from data centers and
artificial intelligence.
The International Energy Agency forecasts that data centers’ total
electricity consumption could reach more than 1,000 terawatt hours in
2026, more than doubling from 2022. Estimates suggest one terawatt hour
can power 70,000 homes for a year.
“AI is driving a significant increase in the amount of data centers and
power that are required on the grid,” Kevin Miller, Amazon Web Services’
vice president of global data centers, told The Associated Press,
adding: “We view advanced new nuclear capacity as really key and
essential."
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said she's thrilled Amazon is the
latest to “BYOP” or “bring your own power” to the buildout of data
centers. Granholm spoke at an event for Wednesday's announcement at
Amazon's second headquarters in Virginia. Virginia's governor and two
U.S. senators also attended.
The United States aims to reach 100% clean electricity by 2035. Granholm
said small modular reactors are a “huge piece of how we’re going to
solve this puzzle,” a way to phase out fossil fuel power while
responding to the increasing electricity demand from data centers and
new factories. She said her department will provide $900 million to
deploy more of these reactors.
Small modular reactors are a type of nuclear reactor that can generate
up to roughly one-third the amount of power of a traditional reactor.
Developers say small reactors will be built faster and at a lower cost
than large power reactors, scaling to fit needs of a particular
location. They aim to start spinning up electricity in the early 2030s,
if the Nuclear Regulatory Commission gives permission to build and
operate their designs and the technology succeeds.
If new, clean power isn’t added as data centers are developed, the U.S.
runs the risk of “browning the grid,” or including more power that isn't
made from clean sources, said Kathryn Huff, a former U.S. assistant
secretary for nuclear energy who is now an associate professor at the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
The reactors are currently under development, with none currently
providing power to the electric grid in the U.S. Big investors can help
change that, and these announcements could be the “inflection point”
that makes scaling up this technology truly possible, Huff said.
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The Google logo, left, is displayed at the company's headquarters in
Mountain View, Calif., on July 19, 2016, and the Amazon logo is
displayed on the exterior wall of the Amazon OXR1 fulfillment center
in Oxnard, Calif., on Aug. 21, 2024. (AP Photo)
Jacopo Buongiorno, professor of
nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, echoed that, saying the industry needs customers who
value the reliability and carbon-free attributes of nuclear and are
willing to pay a premium for it at first, until a number of the
next-generation reactors are deployed and the cost comes down.
On Monday, Google said it was signing a contract to purchase nuclear
energy from multiple small modular reactors that Kairos Power, a
nuclear technology company, plans to develop.
The news highlights “the technologies that we’re going to need to
achieve round the clock clean energy, not only for Google but for
the world,” Michael Terrell, Google's senior director of energy and
climate, told the AP.
With Kairos, Google said it expects to bring the first small modular
reactor online by 2030, with more to come through 2035. The deal is
projected to bring 500 megawatts of power to the grid. For context,
Google consumed more than 24 terawatt hours of electricity last
year, according to the company's annual environmental report. One
terawatt is equal to 1,000,000 megawatts.
Meanwhile, Amazon's announcements Wednesday included working with
utility Dominion Energy to explore putting a small modular reactor
near its existing North Anna nuclear power station in Virginia. It's
investing in reactor developer X-energy for its early development
work, and collaborating with regional utility Energy Northwest in
central Washington to put four of the X-energy reactors there.
Combined, the three announcements could account for more than 5,000
megawatts of power by the late 2030s with the possibility of more.
All of that is still likely only a small fraction of the company’s
total energy consumption, a figure that Amazon does not report
publicly.
New reactor designs pair well with industrial applications because
they can be built on a small footprint and generate reliable power,
with some able to provide high-temperature heat too, at the site,
said Doug True, chief nuclear officer at the industry trade
association, Nuclear Energy Institute.
“It seems like a really good fit to support those facilities, and
for a lot of different applications depending upon the amount of
power that’s needed by the customer,” he said.
Both Amazon and Google have committed to using renewable energy to
address climate change. By 2030, Google has pledged to meet net-zero
emissions, and run carbon-free energy every hour of every day on
every grid where it operates. It says it has already matched 100% of
its global electricity consumption with renewable energy purchases
on an annual basis. However, the company has fallen short on
decreasing its emissions.
Amazon has said it would match all of its global electricity
consumption with 100% renewable energy by 2030, and recently
announced it met that goal early in 2023. Though the company has
matched its consumption as far as purchases of an equivalent amount
of renewable energy, that does not necessarily mean it is using that
to power its operations.
Amazon saw its electricity emissions drop 11%, but direct emissions
— known as Scope 1 — increased 7%, according to its 2023
sustainability report. The company is also targeting net zero-carbon
by 2040.
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