AI driving rise in Google’s greenhouse gas emissions, says company

“This result was primarily due to increases in data centre energy consumption and supply chain emissions”, the company’s report said. “As we further integrate AI into our products, reducing emissions may be challenging due to increasing energy demands from the greater intensity of AI compute, and the emissions associated with the expected increases in our technical infrastructure investment.” As well as the increasing electricity demands sparked by the rise in demand for AI services, the report also highlighted the stark contrasts in carbon-free energy use in the company’s different data centres around the world. Google’s data showed that while most of its centres in Europe and the Americas got the majority of their energy from carbon-free sources, centres in the Middle East, Asia and Australia used far less. “In spite of the progress we are making, we face significant challenges that we’re actively working through,” Google said. Story continues “In 2023, our total GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions increased 13% year-over-year, primarily driven by increased data centre energy consumption and supply chain emissions.
“While we advanced clean energy on many of the grids where we operate, there are still some hard-to-decarbonise regions like Asia-Pacific where CFE (carbon-free energy) isn’t readily available. “In addition, we often see longer lead times between initial investments and construction of clean energy projects and the resulting GHG reductions from them.”