CLIMATE HERO OR VILLIAN?
Newsweek US|October 04, 2024
AI COULD REVOLUTIONIZE CLEAN ENERGY, BUT ITS POWER DEMANDS ARE DRIVING UP EMISSIONS
JEFF YOUNG
CLIMATE HERO OR VILLIAN?

THE VACANT BUILDINGS AND ABANDONED works of the old steel mill in Midland, Pennsylvania, speak to the Ohio Valley town's industrial past. Crucible Steel employed thousands here for nearly a century, driving the local economy before it shuttered in the industry's downturn decades ago, leaving yet another rust belt artifact behind. But Mawson Infrastructure Group CEO Rahul Mewawalla sees something else in the industrial waste: energy for a data center to make this small town just east of the Ohio state line part of the AI revolution.

"The underlying bones of the power infrastructure are there," Mewawalla told Newsweek. Old industrial sites like the Midland steelworks used massive amounts of electricity, and the high-power connections were still in place when the mill closed.

Mawson now has some 60 modular tractor-trailer-sized data center units humming away on 8 acres of the former Crucible Steel site, crunching zeroes and ones for digital customers. The gleaming metal of the data units are a sharp contrast to the grimy remnant structures and railroad tracks.

But the graphic processing units, or GPUs, inside the data centers that make much of generative AI possible are energy hogs-gulping down electricity and belching out high heat-which, in turn, require even more power for cooling to keep the servers at operational temperature. Mewawalla said the recent addition of an AI customer spurred Mawson to expand to 120 megawatts of computing power in Midland.

With billions of dollars currently flowing into AI and the technical infrastructure it requires, how we decide to both power and then apply the technology could determine if AI proves to be a climate hero or a climate villain.

This story is from the October 04, 2024 edition of Newsweek US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the October 04, 2024 edition of Newsweek US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM NEWSWEEK USView All
Zachary Quinto
Newsweek US

Zachary Quinto

ZACHARY QUINTO HAS PLAYED DOCTORS BEFORE, BUT HE'S \"NEVER PLAYED a doctor like\" the one he plays on NBC's Brilliant Minds (September 23).

time-read
2 mins  |
October 11, 2024
Adam Brody
Newsweek US

Adam Brody

NETFLIX KNOWS EXACTLY WHAT MILLENNIALS want, and it's to see Adam Brody and Kristen Bell fall in love.

time-read
1 min  |
October 11, 2024
Partners in Crime
Newsweek US

Partners in Crime

Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt shares his delight at teaming up with Shailene Woodley again in new Amazon Prime movie Killer Heat

time-read
6 mins  |
October 11, 2024
HOW TO FIND A WORKPLACE THAT LOVES YOU BACK
Newsweek US

HOW TO FIND A WORKPLACE THAT LOVES YOU BACK

Insights from America's Top Most Loved Workplaces

time-read
3 mins  |
October 11, 2024
MOST LOVED WORKPLACES 2024
Newsweek US

MOST LOVED WORKPLACES 2024

AT A TIME WHEN WORKERS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES CONTINUE TO redefine what they expect from their jobs, the companies on Newsweek's annual list of the Most Loved Workplaces in America are setting the standard for what a fulfilling workplace looks like.

time-read
10 mins  |
October 11, 2024
Q&A LEE YARON
Newsweek US

Q&A LEE YARON

With 10/7, the professional became profoundly personal.

time-read
3 mins  |
October 11, 2024
SDEROT INTERSECTION
Newsweek US

SDEROT INTERSECTION

How Jewish and Arab strangers united to rescue two little girls amidst Hamas’ October 7 attack

time-read
9 mins  |
October 11, 2024
No End in Sight
Newsweek US

No End in Sight

AS TENSIONS CONTINUE TO FLARE AT ISRAEL'S BORDERS, NEWSWEEK DISCOVERS HOW LIFE HAS CHANGED IN THE REGION A YEAR ON FROM THE OCTOBER 7 HAMAS ATTACKS

time-read
10+ mins  |
October 11, 2024
Thai Scammers Set Sights on US
Newsweek US

Thai Scammers Set Sights on US

Newsweek looks inside the Southeast Asian country's $2 billion cybercrime industry and how American citizens are now falling prey to sophisticated schemes run overseas

time-read
6 mins  |
October 11, 2024
PARTING SHOT: Sarah Paulson
Newsweek US

PARTING SHOT: Sarah Paulson

\"CAN YOU IMAGINE IF THE AIR WAS JUST FILLED WITH DUST PARTICLES and you literally could not breathe?\" That's what Sarah Paulson is tackling in her new film Hold Your Breath (October 3).

time-read
1 min  |
October 04, 2024