LAS VEGAS, NV – JUNE 06: A security guard check in an Amazon truck at the Amazon regional distribution center on June 6, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Amazon is expanding into more self delivery of their packages. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)
When AmazonĀ announcedĀ this month that it had achieved 100% renewable energy seven years ahead of schedule, that sounded like really good news for Virginia. Amazon owns more data centers here than anyone else, and data center energy demand is driving Dominion Energy Virginiaās plan to renege on its climate commitments, keep dirty coal plants online and build expensive new gas plants and transmission lines.
Unfortunately, Amazonās announcement is so full of asterisks it looks like a starry night.
Letās start with the good news. Amazonās claim that it has purchased enough renewable energy to āmatchā its energy use is likely true, though itsĀ sustainability reportĀ doesnāt reveal essential details like how much energy the company uses. Amazon also says it is the largest corporate purchaser of renewable energy in the world, an impressive achievement.
Some of that renewable energy is in Virginia, so it is reasonable to say it serves the companyās data centers here. A map on AmazonāsĀ websiteĀ shows the company has invested in 19 solar farms in Virginia, with a capacity that totals around 1,386 MWĀ ā about a quarter of allĀ solar installed in VirginiaĀ to date. Thatās terrific. If every company operating in Virginia did as much, weād be rolling in solar, figuratively speaking.
So what am I complaining about?
One problem is that the energy appetite of Amazonās data centers in Virginia far outstrips the output of all of its solar farms here. The other problem is that producing renewable energy in the middle of the day can only very loosely be said to āmatchā energy used at other times of the day and night. Meeting energy demand on a 24/7 basis is harder, and Amazon isnāt even trying.
Letās start with the numbers. Because the sun doesnāt shine all the time, a large solar array produces, on average, 22-25% of what it produces on a cloudless day at noon. (That percentage is known as the facilityās capacity factor.) At a 25% capacity factor, Amazonās 1,386 MW worth of solar panels produce enough electricity to āmatchā about 347 MW of demand.
Amazon keeps its energy demand in Virginia a secret, but we can be pretty sure itsĀ 110 data centersĀ here use way more than that. A 2019Ā Greenpeace reportĀ estimated Amazonās Virginia data center demand at 1,700 MW in operation or under construction, an amount that would call for 6,800 MW of solar. Amazon rejected Greenpeaceās estimate at the time, but it didnāt supply a better one.Ā More recentĀ estimates suggest Amazonās energy appetite in Virginia is on its way to 2,700 MW, enough to require the output of around 11,000 MW of solar.
Luckily for us, Virginia is part ofĀ PJM, a regional transmission grid that covers all or parts of 13 states plus Washington, D.C. Generation sources located anywhere in the region can serve a Virginia customer, and Amazonās map shows it has utility solar and wind projects in several PJM states. By my count, these add up to as much as 4,000 MW of additional renewable energy that could be allocated to Virginia data centers, if Amazon had no other operations in those states that it wanted to power. (Which, however, it does.)
Adding together its solar in Virginia and elsewhere in PJM still leaves Amazon short of what it likely needs. So, if the company is correct that it has secured enough renewable energy to match all of its demand, a lot of those facilities must be in other regions or other countries. Yet the climate benefit of Amazonās solar farms in (for example) Spain, which getsĀ more than 50%Ā of its electricity from renewable energy, is significantly less than the climate benefit of solar in PJM, where the percentage of wind and solar combined still hangs in theĀ single digits.
I will ā almost ā give Amazon a pass on this point. PJM has been soĀ appallingly slowĀ to approve new generation that Amazon could well have as many projects in the āqueueā as online. PJM claims it will catch up in the next year and a half, and when that happens, perhaps Amazon wonāt feel the need to obfuscate.
Even if Amazon were āmatchingā all its energy needs with wind and solar in PJM, though, itās the second problem that troubles me more. Building solar and wind is cheap; Amazon very likely makes a profit on it. Actually ensuring renewable energy provides all the juice for the companyās operations every hour of every day, on the other hand, would require a heck of a lot of expensive energy storage. And Amazon is not doing that.
Without energy storage, solar delivers electricity only while the sun is shining. The rest of the time, Amazonās data centers run on whatever resource mix the local utility uses. In both Virginia and PJMās territory, fossil fuels make up the great majority of the mix. Building more Amazon data centers in Virginia increases the burning of fossil fuels, causing more pollution and raising costs that are borne by the rest of us.
Ā Amazonās HQ2 in Arlington, Virginia. (Sarah Vogelsong/Virginia Mercury)
The self-styled climate hero turns out to be a climate parasite, harming people to make itself look good.
Combining renewable energy with storage to achieve true carbon neutrality isnāt prohibitively expensive. Other leading tech companies seem to be making that extra effort, with Google notable for itsĀ commitmentĀ to meeting its energy demand with renewable energy and storage on a 24/7 basis.
Amazonās failure to rise to this challenge explains why, in spite of its massive investments in wind and solar, the companyās carbon footprint actuallyĀ rose by 34%Ā since the launch of its Climate Pledge in 2019, when it set a target of net zero carbon emissions by 2040.
That explains why, a year ago, theĀ Science Based Targets initiative, a U.N.-backed organization that monitors corporate net-zero plans, removed Amazon from a list of companies taking action on climate goals. According toĀ press reports, Amazon failed āto implement its commitment to set a credible target for reducing carbon emissions.ā
Among those least impressed with the companyās efforts are its own workers. Last year, Amazon Employees for Climate JusticeĀ accused the companyĀ of failing in its climate commitments, and the group released its own report this month allegingĀ multiple climate failures, including using ācreative accountingā to inflate its achievements.
If Virginia is serious about meeting the climate challenge, we canāt blindly accept rosy claims from corporations whose central goal is not sustainability, but growth. Data centers whose energy demand isnāt met on a 24/7 basis from zero-carbon sources located on the same grid are not part of the climate solution, they are part of the problem. And currently, Amazonās data centers are making the problem worse.
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