What does Google’s move into nuclear power mean for AI – and the world?
In today’s newsletter: Google will soon use nuclear reactors to run its AI datacentres. What are the economic, ethical and environmental implications?
Good morning. If you were looking for an inkblot test for your view of big tech’s investment in artificial intelligence, you could hardly do better than the news that Google is ordering the construction of at least six small nuclear reactors to power the growth of the technology.
Here, in one view, is an enlightened business leveraging its size to invest in infrastructure that could change the world for the better. Here, in another, is a poorly regulated corporation ignoring democratic objections in the brutal race for control of an innovation with great potential to do harm – and leaving the rest of us with little say in its development.
Google is making this eye-catching move because the datacentres that power the explosive growth of generative AI consume huge amounts of electricity – more than the existing grid in the US or other western nations can readily supply. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to technology journalist Chris Stokel-Walker, author of How AI Ate the World, about why the demand for power is growing so quickly – and whether we can trust big tech to handle the consequences. Here are the headlines.
Five big stories
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Welfare | Draconian penalties that caused unpaid carers to rack up thousands of pounds of debt after falling foul of benefit rules are to be overhauled, the government has announced. The move comes six months after a Guardian investigation revealed tens of thousands of vulnerable carers were facing hefty overpayments or even prosecution over unwitting errors.
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Middle East | The Biden administration has warned Israel that it faces possible punishment, including the potential stopping of US weapons transfers, if it does not take immediate action to let more humanitarian aid into Gaza. The letter says the flow of assistance has dropped by more than 50% since Israel promised in March to allow more deliveries.
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‘Spy cops’ scandal | An undercover police officer has admitted that he spied on Keir Starmer while he was a radical barrister, a public inquiry has heard. The police spy has said that he accessed confidential details of Starmer’s legal advice to two environmentalist campaigners in the well-known McLibel case in the early 1990s.
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Economy | British employers have warned that a rise in employer national insurance contributions in the budget could hit hiring and limit pay rises, hurting businesses including pubs, hotels and restaurants. Keir Starmer twice refused yesterday to rule out a rise in employers’ national insurance contributions in the 30 October budget.
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US election 2024 | Elon Musk gave around $75m to his pro-Donald Trump spending group in the span of three months, federal disclosures show, underscoring how the billionaire has become crucial to the Republican candidate’s efforts to win the US presidential election.
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They might be called “small nuclear reactors”, but don’t be fooled: the 500MW Google is buying from Kairos Power is enough to power a midsize city. To begin to understand the scale of the demand AI puts on the electricity grid, keep in mind that this is only enough to cover one datacentre campus equipped to handle the growing demands of AI. One company alone, OpenAI, is trying to get the White House to sign off on building at least five datacentres, needing 5GW each of power – 10 times as big.
The reason for this nuclear power rush: the vast energy consumption of the computer chips (called graphics processing units or GPUs) that power the training of the large language models crucial to the development of AI. Meanwhile, a ChatGPT query needs nearly 10 times as much electricity to process as a Google search.
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“GPUs are more advanced and more powerful than the CPUs [central processing units] of the previous generation of datacentres,” Chris Stokel-Walker said. “So there’s more demand there immediately. But we are also starting to see massive ‘megaclusters’ of GPUs. It’s not just the individual chips getting bigger and needing more power: it’s the race to get as many together to amplify their power as possible.”
How much impact will AI’s demand for power have?
“The challenge in estimating this is that the companies are pretty coy about telling us their power usage,” said Chris. “But there is a settled understanding that the energy used by datacentres is going to increase hugely as AI becomes layered into everything we do.”
The increase in demand already is significant: where the average datacentre drew 10MW of power a decade ago, they need 100MW today. And the biggest can already demand more than 600MW each.
The New York-based Uptime Institute, which has created a benchmarking system that is now industry standard, predicts that whereas AI only accounts for 2% of global datacentres’ power use today, that will reach 10% by next year. “The growth in power consumption is not linear,” Chris said. “In the same way that we used to have whacking great transistors behind our TVs and now we have flatscreens with eco-friendly modes, they are getting more efficient. But that doesn’t mean it’s not going upwards – just that it’s going up more slowly.”
How are tech companies trying to get the power to meet their needs?
By building it or paying others to do so. And because most governments expect that control of AI will be crucial to their ability to compete globally in the future, tech firms have a very strong hand when negotiating what to build and where.
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“The argument tech companies are making, and that they’re trying to cement in the minds of decision-makers around the world, is: you either buy into this and sign up, or you run the risk of falling behind,” Chris said.
This New York Times piece lays out a case study of how that plays out in practice. It reports that as part of a recent fundraising effort, OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, told executives at a Taiwanese semiconductor company that it would cost about $7tn (£5.6tn) to fulfil his vision of 36 semiconductor plants and additional datacentres. That’s about a quarter of the total US annual economic output. OpenAI denies that claim, and says that its plans run to the hundreds of billions of dollars.
Meanwhile, Altman has also been considering building these centres in other countries, including the United Arab Emirates. But there are fears in Washington that placing the centres there could give China a back door to American AI advances, because of the links between Chinese and Emirati universities. And at the same time, Altman is exploring plans for centres within the US.
“The warning is being used as a stick alongside the carrot,” Chris said. “They’re saying: if you don’t do this, we will go elsewhere, and you will not just lose the investment, but face a national security risk.”
What is the potential impact on the climate?
Big tech companies insist they are leaning into renewable sources of power as much as possible – and argue that AI could ultimately be a crucial tool to limit the damage caused by the climate crisis.
It is true that tech firms’ investment in renewable sources of energy has played an important part in their growth. But claiming that AI will help defeat the climate crisis is a theoretical benefit that won’t be seen until some point in the fairly distant future. And there are claims that emissions caused by current energy usage from datacentres owned by the likes of Google, Microsoft and Meta are much higher than they admit publicly.
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In this piece published last month, Isabel O’Brien reported that big tech firms are using renewable energy credits – which may not actually be used to power the datacentres themselves and which may not even reduce emissions – to artificially deflate their reported emissions. That means the actual figures could be more than seven times higher than the numbers they report.
What about the use of nuclear power?
Google says its experiment makes it the first company in the world to buy nuclear energy from small nuclear reactors. But Amazon and Microsoft have already struck deals with conventional, larger nuclear power plants in the US this year. Don’t panic, but Microsoft’s deal will for the first time in five years activate a nuclear reactor at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania – the site of the worst nuclear meltdown in US history. Sensibly, they’re emphasising its history of safe operation since the 1979 disaster at another reactor there – and renaming it.
With datacentres estimated to be on track to produce about 2.5bn tonnes of carbon-dioxide equivalent emissions by 2030, there is an environmental argument for the use of nuclear power. But that is a highly controversial case, which, because of the associated risks, has been the subject of charged democratic debate for many years. Wherever you stand on that question, it is remarkable that these companies appear to be able to simply decide on their own.
“One of the things that’s really striking here is what it says about how tech companies operate: as supranational organisations that manage to bend countries’ regulation to their will,” Chris said.
On the other hand, Google argues its investment in small nuclear reactors could be a necessary boost to a technology that has struggled to get off the ground. “In the end, some of this does trickle down,” said Chris. “They tend to commercialise technologies in a safe way. But it takes a long time, and the benefits are unequally distributed.”
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Can governments bring these changes under control?
There are well-documented issues with regulating tech firms: without globally enforced agreements, there will always be another country ready to offer a better deal. See, for example, Ireland’s status as the European home of many big techfirms because of its favourable tax regime.
Regulation does not necessarily need to be globally agreed to be effective, however: in California, for example, new legislation intended to combat greenwashing will soon require all private companies with global revenue above $1bn to publish details of their carbon footprint. Since any big tech firm is bound to want to maintain operations in California, that could have much wider ramifications.
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The impact of attempts at regulation and better data collection on the growth of AI may also depend on whether tech firms willingly cooperate – and if not, whether there is an appetite to force them to. The controversy over renewable energy credits is an example of how vexed even apparently positive steps can be.
And big tech firms have a valuable card in their hand: the desperate desire among governments around the world to win the AI race. “These companies point to astronomical figures of expected improvements in GDP and they say, this is the wave that is coming,” Chris said. “You can either ride it, or drown.”
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After Tommy Robinson’s latest book, Manifesto, briefly went to No 1 on Amazon, Zoe Williams read the reader reviews to see how the virulently racist book had been received by thought who bought it. What she found was alarming and made her reconsider an age-old question: what is society’s duty when it comes to the storytelling of the far right? Nimo
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Simon Usborne answers all the questions you’ve ever had about the soaring popularity of veneers – and, brace yourself, explains what happens when they fall out. Certainly set my teeth on edge. Archie
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The number of sleep tracking apps and devices is growing exponentially – the industry is estimated to be worth £270m a year. But do these gizmos actually improve users’ sleep or just create new problems? Anita Chaudhuri delves into the world of orthosomnia – the medical term for an unhealthy obsession with attaining perfect sleep - to find out. Nimo
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Marina Hyde addresses the burning question of the age: why is everything you ever read anyhere now about Strictly Come Dancing? Archie
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Emilie Parker was one of the 20 children murdered in the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012. David Smith spoke to her father, Robbie Parker, about grief and the decade of harassment he endured after he became the focus of a conspiracy peddled by the far-right radio host Alex Jones. Nimo
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Football | Thomas Tuchel has agreed to become England’s manager after talks with the Football Association accelerated on Tuesday. The 51-year-old will be the third foreign manager of the men’s team and the first from Germany. Barney Ronay writes that Tuchel is “an intriguing, baggage‑heavy appointment that might turn out to be a not un‑good idea.”
Cricket | England women made a shock exit from the T20 World Cup on Tuesday evening after a rampant West Indies handed them a six-wicket defeat, chasing down their 142-run target in 18 overs – a margin of victory so substantial that they leapfrogged South Africa on net run rate to top Group B.
Football | Brydon Carse took the wicket of Mohammad Rizwan in the morning session of the second test between England and Pakistan to leave Pakistan 264-6. The home side had reached 302-6 a few minutes ago. Follow it live here.
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Our Guardian print edition leads this morning with “Minister vows to end scandal that left thousands of carers in debt”. “Now PM is engulfed by Swift furore” – that’s the Daily Mail, on Keir Starmer’s trip to a Taylor Swift concert. The Financial Times says “Reeves banks on budget tax rises to plug deepening black hole of £40bn”. The Telegraph has “Reeves’s U-turn on dangers of NI rise” – the chancellor previously admitted it would impact workers, says the paper. The IFS agrees, according to the i: “NI tax hike on business will hit workers, Reeves told”.
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“The new Kaiser chief” is how the Daily Mirror welcomes Thomas Tuchel as England manager. “Labour’s war on waist” says the Metro, about the idea of slimming injections to get people off sickness benefits and into work. “Time is running out … I need your help to change cruel law” – the Daily Express boosts Esther Rantzen’s campaign on assisted dying. “Sick could end life if doctors and judge agree” – MPs today being debating the proposed law, reports the Times.
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When she was just eight years old, Adriana Brownlee wrote down that she “would like to be famous for climbing the highest mountain in the world … and be one of the youngest girls to do this”.
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Now, age 23, she has become the youngest woman to climb all 14 of the world’s 8,000-metre-plus peaks. When she was reaching the summit of Shishapangma in Tibet last week, she began to cry, realising she was about to join a group of fewer than 100 people to have climbed all 14 peaks. Brownlee now wants to help others scale the world’s highest points. “I will stay in the mountains, but now want to help others achieve their dream by creating a new generation of high-altitude mountaineering and trekking experiences.”