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Microsoft Eyes Nuclear Energy To Power Its Massive AI Ambitions
-- Gates partners with
“Nuclear energy, if we do it right, will help us solve our climate goals,” Gates told
First, Gates teamed with fellow billionaire
And now, Gates is planning to revolutionize his own company, Microsoft, by adopting nuclear in order to provide a green source of energy for its current operations as well as its substantial AI ambitions (AI was the predominant conversation topic at Microsoft’s Surface event last week). The insights into Microsoft’s nuclear ambitions come from a corporate job posting, which seeks someone to “lead project initiatives for all aspects of nuclear energy infrastructure for global growth.”
Reporting from the Verge signals that Microsoft is looking to invest in Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), an emerging technology that would allow nuclear reactor designs to be standardized, therefore significantly cutting back on overhead costs as well as safety concerns. While nascent, the small technology is set to be the next big thing in nuclear, with the first SMR design approved and certified by the
Data centers, which allow tech companies to do what they do, are energy guzzlers of massive proportions. Data centers and data transmission networks are solely responsible for nearly 1% of all energy-related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions globally. While 1% may not sound all that impressive, that amounts to a truly staggering amount of emissions from just one node of just one value chain in just one sector.
This energy problem extends to the burgeoning Artificial Intelligence industry. The problem with AI is that it’s a particularly energy-hungry industry, as machine learning requires incredible amounts of computing power over extended timelines. In some of the more intensive cases, the energy footprints of singular AI training models have been equivalent to the lifetime carbon footprint of five cars, or 125 New York-
Together, the carbon-intensive nature of data storage and AI could seriously compromise the tech sector’s emissions pledges. This is true for the sector as a whole, but is especially so for
Nuclear could change all of that by providing a reliable, virtually inexhaustible source of carbon-free baseload power for the tech industry. “Nuclear has some incredible pluses,” Gates told
The forward-thinking billionaire’s open acceptance of the controversial form of energy production has been at the forefront of a changing tide in public opinion for the nuclear option. Currently, support for nuclear power in
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