Granholm eyes talks with Big Tech on AI power needs
- Hans Nichols
, author ofAxios Sneak PeekShare on facebook (opens in new window)Share on twitter (opens in new window)Share on linkedin (opens in new window)Share on email (opens in new window)Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm tours a Heinz-Kraft factory floor in Holland, Mich. Photo: Hans Nichols, Axios
The Biden administration wants to "accelerate" its conversations with big technology companies on how to generate more electricity — including with nuclear power — to meet their massive demand for artificial intelligence computing.
Why it matters: The growing demand for power from AI and data centers is a "problem" that needs to be addressed, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm tells Axios in a wide-ranging interview.
- "AI itself isn't a problem, because AI could help to solve the problem," Granholm said last week during a tour of the Midwest, where she was selling President Biden's record on green tech and manufacturing.
- The DOE is exploring how energy-hungry tech firms might be able to host small nuclear plants on the campuses of their massive data centers.
- But conversations with big companies like Microsoft, Google and Amazon need "to accelerate, because this demand for power is only going up," she said.
Driving the news: Granholm spoke with Axios after she announced a $1.52 billion loanguarantee to help restart a shuttered nuclear power plant on the shores of Lake Michigan last week.
- If the Holtec Palisades plant receives regulatory approval, it will become the first recommissioned nuclear facility in U.S. history — part of "major milestones" the Energy Department expects this year for nuclear energy.
- In recent years, electricity consumption has been largely flat, but the needs of electric vehicles, AI computing and data centers — plus clean tech manufacturing — has added new demands on utilities.
Between the lines: The promise of nuclear energy, which currently accounts for 20% of U.S. power generation, was clearly on Granholm's mind.
- It has bipartisan support on Capitol Hill.
- At the same time, the Energy Department is grappling with the growing energy needs from AI computing.
What we're watching: Tech companies have been exploring — and investing in — nuclear fusion to help power their data centers, even as they shift power to renewable sources. But fusion technology could be years away.
- Another source is nuclear fission, produced by small modular reactors (SMRs).
- "Not all of them, but a lot of them— Microsoft, etc. — are interested in bringing their own clean power," Granholm said. And some technology companies are already shifting to running data centers on renewables.
- Still, getting all the appropriate permits to build SMRs is an issue, she said, as are costs.
- "We're trying to crack the code," she said. "How do you bring down that cost, so that utilities are willing to take on the risk of SMRs?"
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