Sam Altman, CEO of Openai, has announced that the company’s new datacenters will be more than 5 GW. This is beyond the use of the whole city of New York.
Openai recently announced a strategic partnership with Nvidia. The two technology giants intend to build and launch more than 2 GW of Datacenter. Nvidia’s investment in the project has been announced at $ 5 billion, but one of the most important challenges for launching these datacenters is the issue of electricity supply.
Artificial intelligence datasers consume a significant volume of electricity
According to Fortune, planned datacenters may consume electricity as much as the whole city of New York, but Openai will not be enough. Projects related to Stargit Initiative can also add another 5 GW to this amount; That is, almost as much as New York Consumer and San Digo California during the devastating heat wave last year.
Professor FEngqi You of the Cornell University Energy Systems Engineering Department says 2 GW is more than the maximum demand for Swiss or Portuguese electricity, and 2 GW is equivalent to both power supply.
Openai and Nvidia have already set up a datacenter in Texas, with electricity consumption equivalent to 6,000 residential units. It is expected that the consumption of five new Stargit projects is expected to reach 5 GW, making energy supply into a fundamental challenge.
Efforts to expand artificial intelligence infrastructure have been accompanied by environmental concerns, with technology giants admit that they are far from achieving their carbon emissions goals. Although the precision carbon footprint of the technology is still unclear, artificial intelligence datacenters put a lot of pressure on local water resources to keep their hardware cool.
Recently, some technology companies have come up with nuclear power plants to supply the electricity needed by artificial intelligence datasers. Scientists have warned that the power consumption of these databases will soon be higher than bitcoin extraction and some countries, and these centers need as much energy as Japan‘s total power consumption by year.
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