The Great Gas Grab Behind AI’s Power Hunger
The AI industry’s insatiable demand for compute is driving a scandalous return to fossil fuels, dressed up as ‘energy independence.’ WIRED’s investigation into air permit documents reveals that just 11 data center campuses, serving the likes of OpenAI, Meta, Microsoft, and xAI, could pump out over 129 million tons of greenhouse gases annually. That’s more than the entire country of Morocco emitted in 2024. These aren’t grid-connected plants subject to public oversight. They are ‘behind the meter’ facilities, built specifically to bypass utility queues and public scrutiny, directly powering AI servers with natural gas. Clean energy researcher Michael Thomas calls it ‘a crazy acceleration of emissions,’ warning we are witnessing a new, filthy peak in the Industrial Revolution’s tail end.
The Hypocrisy of Carbon Neutral Pledges
Major tech companies that once loudly championed carbon reduction are now quietly backsliding at a staggering pace. Meta, which claims to have slashed its emissions by 23.8 million metric tons since 2021, is linked to three new gas plants in Ohio that could wipe out over 10% of those gains at half capacity. Microsoft, while touting its portfolio approach to energy, is reportedly eyeing a Chevron-backed gas project in Texas that could single handedly emit more than Jamaica’s entire national output. The numbers are damning: air permits for these plants, while theoretical maximums, represent a deliberate choice. Energy researcher Jon Koomey points out that data centers don’t vary in demand like the grid, meaning actual emissions will likely mirror those permits far more closely than traditional power plants. This is not a bridge fuel; it’s a permanent, dirty foundation for the AI boom.
A Regulatory Vacuum and a Climate Time Bomb
The Trump administration’s ‘Ratepayer Protection Pledge’ is a toothless gesture that does nothing to cap emissions. In fact, companies like Fermi are explicitly claiming their off grid status exempts them from greenhouse gas regulations. The Fermi campus in Texas, named after President Trump, could emit more than all power sources in Connecticut. Meanwhile, community pushback is mounting. The NAACP has sued xAI over illegally operating gas turbines in Memphis and Mississippi, where low income Black communities bear the brunt of the pollution. With nearly 100 gigawatts of behind the meter gas in the development pipeline, up from just 4 gigawatts in early 2024, the trend is accelerating. The real question, as Thomas warns, is what happens when this scales up tenfold. AI’s future is being built on a foundation of broken climate promises.
Source: Arstechnica
