As AI power needs surge, a Bay Area data center bets on hydrogen as a sustainable alternative – The Mercury News


As artificial intelligence fuels a surge in electricity demand, a Bay Area startup is betting on hydrogen to power the next generation of data centers — and ease their environmental burden.

Banafa, who has written three books on AI and is working on a fourth focused on its environmental impact, said data centers are now consuming enough power annually to supply about 47.5 million homes — the equivalent of every household in California, Texas, Florida, and New York combined.

He supports legislation requiring AI companies to be transparent about their energy use.

“There should be a platform where they publicly share power needs and how they’ll manage it,” he said. “And there should be a cap on how much they can tap into the grid.”

In California, state legislators are considering such measures.

According to a CalMatters report, a bill by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan of San Ramon would require developers of large AI models and data centers to publicly disclose energy use and comply with efficiency standards. State Sen. Steve Padilla of Chula Vista has proposed two additional bills — one to create an energy rate structure specifically for data centers and another to offer tax cuts to centers that use 70% clean energy and create at least 20 jobs.

Bachar hopes ECL’s model will play a role in long-term solutions that support both industry and communities.

“Whatever decisions we make now on energy are going to stay with the technology for a long time,” he said. “We have to do the right thing to make sure we secure our kids’ future, because the AI revolution is not stopping.”



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