Industrial chiller at Yotta Data Services Pvt. data centre, in Navi Mumbai, India, on Thursday, Mar. 14, 2024.
Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images
A huge upswing in the number of data centres worldwide shows no signs of slowing down, prompting Big Tech to consider how best to power the artificial intelligence revolution.
Some of the options on the table include a pivot to nuclear, liquid cooling for data centres, and quantum computing.
Critics, however, have said that as the pace of efficiency gains in electricity use slows, tech giants should recognise the cost of the generative AI boom across the whole supply chain—and let go of the “move fast and break things” narrative.
“The actual environmental cost is quite hidden at the moment. It is just subsidised by the fact that tech companies need to get a product and a buy-in,” Somya Joshi, head of division: global agendas, climate, and systems at the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), told CNBC via video call.
A wave of data centre investment is expected to accelerate even further in the coming years, according to the International Energy Agency, primarily driven by growing digitalisation and the uptake of generative AI.
It is this prospect that has stoked concerns about an electricity demand surge—as well as AI’s often-overlooked but critically important environmental impact.
I think in the summer of every great technology we discover there is a winter — but don’t pay attention to it until winter arrives.
Raj Hazra
CEO of Quantinuum
Data centres, which consume an ever-increasing amount of energy, represent a key piece of infrastructure behind modern-day cloud computing and AI applications.
Giampiero Frisio, president of electrification at Swiss multinational ABB, said the engineering group’s data centre business has enjoyed remarkable growth in recent years, with the segment on track to grow by more than 24% in 2024.
Frisco said ABB has been well placed in the AI demand boom to supply mid-sized and big-name industry players with all the components needed to run a data centre.
“I think the best way to act now is to increase the energy efficiency. That’s the best way because the technology is there, for example, the medium-voltage HiPerGuard UPS. You can do it, and you can do it tomorrow morning,” Frisio told CNBC via video call.
The HiPerGuard UPS refers to ABB’s industry-first medium-voltage uninterruptable power supply, which it says can provide continuous power to large facilities.
A server room at a data centre in India.
Dhiraj Singh | Bloomberg | Getty Images
“The second one is to move on the liquid cooling, there is no doubt. Again, this is in the optic of better energy efficiency. Why? Because a single rack, you know the black boxes that look like a wardrobe with all the servers inside, the power density of those is going to be four to six times higher than before,” Frisio said.
“After that, we are talking about five to 10 years from now; it is the nuclear modular system,” he added.
Big Tech is going nuclear
The upsurge of generative AI demand has coincided with a push to find more efficient cooling solutions in data centres, particularly liquid cooling—a process in which water is used to lower the temperatures of servers and other electronic equipment.
Aerial view of a data centre owned by the US multinational and technology company Google in Santiago on October 9, 2024. The drought that is affecting part of South America, coupled with public pressure, is forcing technology giants such as Google, Amazon, and Microsoft to reformulate their data centre projects in the region in favour of low-water consumption ones.
Rodrigo Arangua | Afp | Getty Images
French power-equipment maker Schneider Electric recently completed an $850 million deal to take a controlling stake in Motivair Corp., a U.S.-based company that specialises in liquid cooling for high-performance computing.
Schneider Electric’s CEO at the time told CNBC that the all-cash deal, which is designed to bolster its offering to data centres, was “rich but not overly expensive” and “fits great” with the firm’s strategy.
Alongside nuclear energy and liquid cooling technology, some tech players have suggested developments within AI could help to decarbonise data centres.
Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, for example, said last month that since “we’re not going to hit the climate goals anyway,” investing in AI could be pivotal to solving some of our biggest environmental challenges.
SEI’s Joshi flatly rejected this point of view.
“These arguments are not new; they are very much in line with the sort of’silver bullet’, ‘tech will save us’ rhetoric,” Joshi said.
“There is something inherently at odds with saying we operate within certain finite planetary boundaries, and yet by exceeding them and continuing with the same extractive narratives, we are somehow going to solve the problem that we’re in now,” she added.
Quantum computing
“I think in the summer of every great technology we discover there is a winner—but don’t pay attention to it until winter arrives,” Raj Hazra, CEO of Quantinuum, the world’s largest integrated quantum computing company, told CNBC via video call.
“That is my way of describing what is happening with generative AI, the infrastructure needed to support it [and] the massive data centres that have to be built.”
Hazra said optimism over the generative AI boom is already straining the cost of running the technology.
“As wonderful as AI is, there are two challenges to it. One is, is it sustainable from a resource standpoint? The other is, Is it responsible?” Hazra said. “The reason I bring up this context is because quantum is critical to both of them.”
Halbergman | E+ | Getty Images
Quantum computing refers to an area of computer science that uses the laws of quantum mechanics to solve extremely complex problems.
Hazra said a “who’s who” of businesses and strategic investors have recently expressed an interest in Quantinuum, with the company raising around $300 million in its latest equity funding round. Honeywell, which is the firm’s majority shareholder, said the fundraising put Quantinuum’s valuation at $5 billion.
“One of the things that has become quite apparent is that it’s no longer OK to say I have a solution to a problem; you have to say I have a sustainable solution to a problem,” Hazra said.
The CEO said one of Quantum’s biggest contributions to society can be to make AI both sustainable and responsible.
“I predict that in the next three to five years, you will see people say, What is my compute infrastructure for running my business? It will be a combination of high-performance computing, AI, and quantum,” he added.