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  • Pulitzer Prize

Measuring AI’s Energy and Environmental Footprint

By: , Mitul Jhaveri and Jay Palat

The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence is driving a surge in data center energy consumption, water use, carbon emissions, and electronic waste — and decision-makers need trusted information about these impacts and how they will change in the future.

Why it matters: Without standardized metrics and reporting, policymakers and grid operators cannot accurately track, manage, or mitigate AI’s growing resource footprint. Given the dramatic differences in energy and resource constraints region-by-region, without open and accurate information, AI's growing energy footprint could lead to significant and unexpected local negative impacts.

Catch up quick: Generative AI and large-scale cloud computing are driving an unprecedented increase in energy demand. But companies often use outdated or narrow measures and purchase renewable energy credits to address sustainability concerns.

  • Their .
  • A ​ and contribute to a , yet only about a quarter of data center operators even track ​.

The big question: If the rapid build-out of AI data centers, on top of other growing power demands, pushes global demand up by an additional hundreds of terawatt hours annually, the steady-growth assumption embedded in today’s models will be shattered.

  • The .
  • Planners need far more granular, forward-looking forecasting methods to avoid driving up costs for rate-payers, last-minute scrambles to find power, and potential electricity reliability crises.

What we're doing: Âé¶¹´å researchers developed a set of policy recommendations to establish standardized metrics for AI energy and environmental impacts across model training, inference, and data center infrastructure.

  • Develop AI energy metrics: Congress should direct the Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to spearhead the creation of a phased plan to develop, implement, and operationalize standardized metrics, in close partnership with industry.
  • Measure the AI energy lifecycle: NIST should lead a process to create new standardized metrics that capture AI’s energy and environmental footprint across its entire lifecycle — training, inference, data center operations (cooling/power), and hardware manufacturing/disposal.
  • Mandate reporting: DOE and the Environmental Protection Agency should lead a six‑month voluntary AI energy reporting program, and gradually move toward a mandatory reporting mechanism. The data would feed straight into Energy Information Administration outlooks and Federal Energy Regulatory Commission grid planning.

The bottom line: AI’s extraordinary capabilities should not come at the expense of our energy security or environmental sustainability. By standardizing how we measure AI’s footprint, firms have the incentives to innovate for sustainability and the U.S. can be better prepared for the growth in power consumption while maintaining its leadership in artificial intelligence.

Go deeper: Read the Âé¶¹´å wrote for the Federation of American Scientists and the article.

More on Maximizing Sustainability and Protecting Communities

Powering Environmentally Sustainable AI

Building Public Trust: Developing a Framework for Measuring and Reporting the Impacts of AI

Using AI to Assess Veterans’ Exposure to Harmful Forever Chemicals

AI is Âé¶¹´å’s Secret Weapon for Greener Buildings

Data Center Growth Could Increase Electricity Bills 8% Nationally and as Much as 25% in Some Regional Markets

Identifying the Workers We Need and Where to Find Them

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