Are your internet habits killing the planet?
The internet is quickly becoming a major contributor to climate change. Here's how to understand the problem—and what can be done to fix it.
This weekend I binged Bridgerton, Netflix’s raunchy, Regency-ish romcom. Along with 45 million other people, I tuned in to find out if incisive, socially-awkward gossip columnist Penelope Featherington could win the heart of her lovable, pirate cosplaying neighbor.
But as I was watching, I had a nagging feeling. Because lately, I've been reading a lot about how the internet contributes to the climate crisis. And I've learned that the web pollutes more than I ever would have guessed.
Everything we do online has an environmental impact, just like the clothes we buy, the food we eat, and the way we travel. But unlike fashion, burgers, and cars, you can’t touch the internet: it seems to exist in an abstract, disembodied place beyond the physical world.
But the internet is physical. It exists in fiber optic cables, cell towers, transformers, and especially data centers: huge concrete buildings housing tens of thousands of computer servers cooled by trillions of liters of water. And data centers require a constant supply of electricity.
To watch Bridgerton, for example, I have to stream Netflix, which is hosted on the Amazon Web Services cloud. AWS is stored on millions of servers in data centers around the world. Those servers run on energy predominantly supplied by burning fossil fuels.
Because of this, the internet’s contribution to climate change already sizable. The Royal Society estimates that digital technologies—our gadgets, the internet and the systems supporting them—are responsible for anywhere from 1.4 to 5.9 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. The scientific academy admits that it’s “an intricate challenge“ to find an exact number, but the estimate puts our web habits on par with the aviation industry. And at least one expert I spoke with said she thinks those estimates are too low.
In the future, the industry’s emissions are expected to grow rapidly, especially as AI becomes more advanced. The IEA estimates that electricity consumption from data centers, AI, and the cryptocurrency sector could double by 2026, consuming as much energy as Japan.
So that made me wonder: Should I be using the internet less? Are Colin Bridgerton and Penelope Featherington really so hot that they’re about to push our climate beyond the brink of livability?
I asked Michael Khoo, climate disinformation program director at the nonprofit Friends of the Earth, and author of a recent report on artificial intelligence. And fortunately, he explained that the internet’s biggest climate problem is not individual internet users. It’s a tech industry committed to the endless expansion of its offerings—particularly artificial intelligence—while shrugging off responsibility for the consequences.
How much internet is too much?
The web isn’t entirely a climate villain. In some ways, it’s a climate hero. “There are a ton of great things that happen on the internet, including research on climate change and communications between scientists,” Khoo told me. The internet makes it possible to work remotely and commute less; to accurately predict natural disasters; to monitor water quality and deforestation via wireless sensors; and even to build the climate models used in the IPCC reports.
So unlike fossil fuels, the internet is not a product that needs to be phased out to preserve a livable climate. It’s just a product that needs to be used more wisely. Some uses of the internet, for example, pollute very little compared to others. A Google search emits about 0.2 grams of carbon dioxide. Every minute spent on TikTok emits about 2.6 grams. Watching one hour of video emits about 36 grams.
But those activities are nothing compared to artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency, which are largely responsible for the recent boom in emissions.
Take Google’s newest search feature: AI-generated answers from its bot Gemini. An AI-assisted search requires 10 times more power than a traditional search, Khoo tells me. And each new generation of generative AI requires more energy. Training ChatGPT-3 consumed 1,287 megawatt hours of electricity and generated 552 tons of CO2—the equivalent of 123 gasoline-powered passenger vehicles driven for one year. Training ChatGPT-4 used approximately 40 times more energy than ChatGPT-3.
Mining for bitcoins uses 145 million megawatt-hours of electricity a year, more than the Netherlands. One MIT study found that the cloud—a network of remote servers that store and manage data—has a larger carbon footprint than the airline industry.
These numbers are only expected to grow, particularly because the more people use these technologies, the more they emit. For example, the act of asking GPT-4 a question is called inference, and some research shows that inference can consume more energy than training. An October 2023 study from the VU Amsterdam School of Business reported that AI servers could be using as much energy as Sweden by 2027.
These figures, however, are just estimates. The real climate impact of AI is still unknown, said Sasha Luccioni, climate lead at AI company Hugging Face, because tech companies don’t release any data on how much power products like ChatGPT require.
“We don't know how much energy it's using. So we don't know what the environmental effect is,” said Luccioni. The lack of transparency is “very frustrating,” she said.
Demand for AI is prolonging coal and fueling gas
In the meantime, while researchers scramble to figure out just how bad AI and cryptocurrency is for the climate, electric utilities have nearly doubled their forecasts for how much power they’ll need in the next four years. Data centers are driving this demand, along with increased American manufacturing, and, ironically, electric vehicles.
Many states say they can’t meet that data center demand with their current capacity. Utilities in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia are prolonging the life of coal plants and planning to build dozens of methane gas plants to supply enough power, according to The New York Times. This power plant build out is “game over for the Biden administration’s 2035 decarbonization goal,” one former solar developer told the Times.
Not all the electricity flowing to data centers is powered by fossil fuels. The companies behind the rapid growth—Amazon, Google, Meta, Apple, and Microsoft—have made significant investments in renewable energy. Together, these five companies are responsible for over half of the global corporate renewables market, according to S&P Global.
But even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman admitted growing AI demands can’t be met by the current amount of nuclear and renewable energy sources. “There’s no way to get there without a breakthrough,” said Altman, according to Reuters.
Khoo called the idea that AI is good for the planet “PR greenwashing spin.” There’s not enough renewable energy in the U.S. to power all of the data centers that exist now, let alone the data centers approved for construction. In the next two years, data centers will make up more than one-third of additional U.S. electricity demand.
The clean AI message is a particularly sneaky greenwashing tactic because the fossil fuel industry is one of the biggest purchasers of AI products. Ninety-two percent of oil and gas companies will use AI to extract oil in the next five years, reports Friends of the Earth. Exxon already uses AI in deep-water drilling and the Permian Basin. Microsoft employees resigned last year over the company’s deals with the fossil fuel industry, which promised to increase oil production and drive up profits, according to Grist. Additionally, building these AI models is so expensive that tech companies like OpenAI are turning to petrostates like the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia to fund the expansion of their AI models.
So while Sam Altman and other artificial intelligence advocates argue that AI can actually help with climate change, and make data centers more efficient, Khoo says the bad overshadows the good. “AI for good is a tiny little pebble under your foot,” he said. “AI for bad is a skyscraper.”
In sum: if you want to stream Bridgerton all day, you’re probably not significantly contributing to planetary catastrophe. But if you want to build an AI chatbot to talk to you exclusively in Colin Bridgerton’s voice, that’s another story entirely.
Solutions for a high-polluting internet
Individual behavior changes alone won’t solve the problem of a high-polluting internet. Ultimately, what’s needed is systemic change from tech companies and fossil fuel companies—and that change must be demanded by individuals.
Here are some examples of systemic changes needed:
A rapid transition to renewable energy. The internet is mostly powered by fossil fuels, but it doesn’t have to be. This month, federal energy regulators approved major reforms to the electric grid that would make it easier to transmit renewable energy and meet demand, including demand from AI and data centers.
More information from tech companies. Tech giants like Amazon and Google shroud their data in secrecy, hiding the exact amount of energy their products use—and therefore how much they pollute. Some lawmakers are already trying to change that. Democrats led by Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) introduced a bill in February that would require a study on AI’s environmental impacts, and develop a voluntary reporting system for corporations to disclose their products’ carbon emissions. “The development of the next generation of AI tools cannot come at the expense of the health of our planet,” Markey said in a statement.
More discernment about whether AI is actually needed by every industry. Everything from smart homes to Google Maps now uses sophisticated AI software. “Before, when you would use a navigation system, it would do a good, old-fashioned calculation of distances between point A and point B. Now we're using generative AI,” Luccioni said. Is that needed? Personally, I don’t want my map to chat with me more than it already does.
And like every climate problem, there is still power in individual choice. The authors of one peer-reviewed study found that changing social norms is just as important to mitigating climate change as the energy transition.
So if you want to be a part of changing social norms around AI, there is a way to do that, too. “You don't need to be like buying all the generative AI products that people are selling,” said Luccioni. “You don't need to buy the latest fridge that has a webcam that you can use to check what you have in your fridge.”
Luccioni suggests that people who want to make greener choices can just use less AI altogether. Using AI instead of simpler technology “will use like 30 times more energy for the exact same output,” she said. "Sometimes I talk to people and they’re like ‘I don't use a calculator anymore, I use ChatGPT.’ And that's wrong on several levels.”
And if you’re looking to be inspired by how organizers can create powerful change: My next story is about how a group of ordinary people in my home state of Virginia have banded together to hold the data center industry accountable.
Correction: A previous version of this article said that Amazon has 50,000 servers across the world. Amazon has millions of servers.
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Further reading:
A.I. Frenzy Complicates Efforts to Keep Power-Hungry Data Sites Green. The New York Times, February 2024.
The data center industry has embraced more sustainable solutions in recent years, becoming a significant investor in renewable power at the corporate level. Sites that leased wind and solar capacity jumped 50 percent year over year as of early 2023, to more than 40 gigawatts, capacity that continues to grow. Still, demand outpaces those investments.
Amid explosive demand, America is running out of power. The Washington Post, March 2024.
The situation is sparking battles across the nation over who will pay for new power supplies, with regulators worrying that residential ratepayers could be stuck with the bill for costly upgrades. It also threatens to stifle the transition to cleaner energy, as utility executives lobby to delay the retirement of fossil fuel plants and bring more online. The power crunch imperils their ability to supply the energy that will be needed to charge the millions of electric cars and household appliances required to meet state and federal climate goals.
Internet data centers are fueling drive to old power source: Coal. The Washington Post, April 2024.
There, massive data centers with computers processing nearly 70 percent of global digital traffic are gobbling up electricity at a rate officials overseeing the power grid say is unsustainable unless two things happen: Several hundred miles of new transmission lines must be built, slicing through neighborhoods and farms in Virginia and three neighboring states. And antiquated coal-powered electricity plants that had been scheduled to go offline will need to keep running to fuel the increasing need for more power, undermining clean energy goals.
How the authoritarian Middle East became the capital of Silicon Valley. The Washington Post, May 2024.
But Middle Eastern money has become the most powerful geopolitical force in the tech industry virtually overnight. “The Khashoggi era is over,” said a prominent venture capitalist.
“Everyone I talk to is either going to or coming back from the UAE — the same way we used to swing by Sand Hill Road,” said Feldman, referring to the street that’s home to Silicon Valley’s storied venture capital firms. Feldman will visit Saudi Arabia later this year.
Catch of the day: Don’t let this face fool you—Reader Marly says Pease is pro-public transportation. We are too, though we’ve never had anything as cool as a metro chew toy.
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Externalities! This is the first essay I have seen about the true costs of the internet.
Crypto and AI should be heavily taxed for their energy use until it can be shown that all of it is supplied by solar & wind.
I was already opposed to overreliance on AI and crypto because I don't trust them. This only makes me feel more secure in not getting involved with them.