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AI Data Centers Boom is Draining Water From Drought-Prone Areas – Sustainability Tipping Point? Your email has been sent Tech giants including Amazon, Microsoft, and Google are fuelling water ...
Real estate investment trust Iron Mountain raised its annual earnings forecast on Thursday, betting on surging demand for its data center leases from businesses looking to adopt artificial ...
The artificial intelligence (AI) boom is fueling a significant increase in global energy demand, with data center electricity consumption expected to double by 2030, according to Delta Electronics ...
Given the state's fossil fuel reliance, advocates are worried a data center boom would pose a setback to decarbonization goals. There are other environmental concerns related to land and water use ...
it added to questions about whether the nascent data center boom had already gone bust. A Wells Fargo report last Monday saying some data centers planned by Amazon Web Services were being ...
Oliver Tan is the CEO of Citicore Renewable Energy Corporation. Even before AI went mainstream, Southeast Asia was embracing renewable energy. © 2025 Fortune Media ...
A rapidly expanding sector of the tech industry is flocking to Georgia. Known as 'data centers,' the warehouse-sized facilities help power the modern connected era. Trump Wins Two Crucial Supreme ...
By 2030, data centers will require slightly more energy than Japan consumes today, with demand for AI-optimized facilities alone set to quadruple, IEA predicts Skip to Main Content Explore Our Brands ...
LONDON, April 9, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Boom Technologies Ltd. ("Boom") proudly announces PHOTON, an ambitious pan-African initiative to establish decentralised, gigawatt-scale AI data centres ...
U.S. utilities are raising capital investments in view of meeting data center power demand ... additional power-generating capacity the AI boom will need and how electric utilities will navigate ...
Louisville and the surrounding area have seen a bevy of new data center projects in the last several months. On this week's Access Louisville podcast, we discuss the implications of this activity.