American leadership in artificial intelligence promises massive economic opportunities and transformation across industries: AI systems are poised to drive breakthroughs in drug discovery, enable critical infrastructure, and revolutionize sectors from healthcare to finance.
To drive these shifts, AI needs a massive amount of energy. By 2028, AI data centers are expected to account for 12 percent of nationwide electricity demand. Data centers’ median size will more than double over the next decade, according to a survey of US data center operators from power provider Bloom Energy. Some will require more than a gigawatt of power – enough for over 800,000 average American homes.
Many Americans are concerned about how AI’s hunger for energy will impact them. Communities around the country are pushing back against the building of new data centers nearby, despite their potential to create jobs and boost local economies.
Chief among communities’ concerns are rising energy costs and how new data centers could drive them up further. Growing pressure on the grid also increases the risk of power outages, and communities are alarmed about data centers’ potential pollution, noise, and water and land use.
Powering the AI economy without local communities bearing the brunt of higher energy bills, power outages, and pollution is a challenge, to be sure. But specific types of onsite power can create a “yes, and” to fuel AI’s growth and support communities.
Onsite power means physically producing electricity at the location where it’s used. For example, fuel cells are a type of onsite power that convert natural gas, hydrogen, or biogas into electricity without using combustion. Other power sources that data centers can deploy onsite include natural gas engines and turbines.
When data centers use certain kinds of onsite power, it creates several advantages for both local communities and AI’s growth.
Utilities can also work directly with onsite power providers to produce energy for data centers in their service areas and “fence off” that coverage, preventing data centers’ costs from being passed on to consumers.
Approaches like these help keep consumer utility bills stable while providing reliable power for data centers to fuel AI.
Interest is rising in onsite power generation for data centers: by 2030, nearly 40% expect to use some onsite power and 27% say it will provide all of their electricity.
This will help data centers deliver on their promised local economic benefits—and AI’s broad transformative potential—without the adverse effects of higher energy costs, power outages, and more pollution and noise in American communities.
This story was produced by Bloom Energy and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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