Alphabet’s Google, along with TPG Rise Climate and other investors, has invested over $800 million in clean energy developer Intersect Power to expand its data center capacity amidst the growing demand driven by AI technologies. This significant funding comes as companies like Google, Microsoft, and Meta seek to enhance their domestic infrastructure to meet surging cloud and data processing demands.
Google invests $800 million in clean energy developer Intersect Power
The partnership aims to develop industrial parks with co-located data centers and renewable energy facilities. By situating data centers next to clean energy sources, Google intends to alleviate pressure on the power grid and minimize project delivery timelines. The move addresses the challenges faced by the U.S. electrical systems to meet the rapidly increasing power needs of technologies like Generative AI, which have begun to stress the country’s already vulnerable infrastructure.
As a principal customer for Intersect Power’s energy production, Google plans to operate new data centers powered directly by clean energy. This strategy entails bringing new generation capacity online alongside data center launches, thereby enhancing power delivery and grid reliability. The first phase of this collaborative project is expected to commence operations by 2026 and reach full completion by 2027.
Google’s ambitious 20 billion dollar initiative
In conjunction with TPG Rise Climate and Intersect Power, Google disclosed plans to invest $20 billion in renewable energy and energy-storage solutions by 2030. This approach focuses on co-locating data centers with solar, wind, and battery infrastructures. As major tech firms face escalating energy demands for their growing data center fleets, procuring enough clean energy has surged to a top priority.
Both Google and Intersect Power recognize the intertwined challenges of scaling energy production and meeting rigorous carbon-free targets. The complexities presented by the current U.S. transmission grids add urgency as major players race against time to build expansive data center facilities.
Intersect Power has begun financing its first project under this partnership, expected to launch at an undisclosed site within the specified timeline. The company recently reported raising over $800 million in its equity investment round, led by TPG Rise Climate, with contributions from Google and other existing investors.
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Addressing energy consumption and environmental goals
The strategy revolves around creating industrial parks fueled by renewable power while remaining linked to the grid. “We’re looking at siting next to power generation and creating these industrial parks — still connected to the grid at the substation or interconnection point, but removing the bottlenecks to bringing generation online and also loads online,” Amanda Peterson Corio, Google’s global head of data center energy, told Canary Media. “Where we can implement this strategy, we think it’s a great way to reduce grid stress and make new load as clean as possible.”
Intersect Power has made substantial strides toward this objective, operating 2.2 gigawatts of solar projects and 2.4 gigawatt-hours of battery initiatives across California and Texas. The company envisions larger expansions that could supply up to 80% of a site’s energy needs directly from renewable sources, minimally relying on the grid for power.
Challenges remain, particularly in convincing customers to develop new facilities in regions rich in renewable resources. New data from consultancy Grid Strategies highlights the soaring electricity demands expected from data centers, projecting an increase from 23 gigawatts in 2022 to nearly 128 gigawatts by December 2024. This rapid growth poses significant risks to national decarbonization efforts, necessitating a careful balance between expanding energy capacity and achieving climate goals.
Sierra Club’s report urges tech companies to focus on clean energy and smart energy sourcing. It emphasizes the importance of siting facilities in regions with robust renewable energy availability to prevent compromises on decarbonization objectives. Google, for its part, remains committed to using round-the-clock carbon-free energy in its data centers by 2030, although its growing power appetite has resulted in rising emissions—13% higher in 2023 compared to the previous year.
Featured image credit: Intersect Power