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#climategoals

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A recent IMF report warns that by 2030, global electricity demand from AI could reach 1,500 terawatt-hours — that's equal to India’s total current energy consumption, and India is the 3rd-largest energy consumer in the world.

As AI advances, so do the stakes for our energy infrastructure and climate goals.

imf.org/en/Publications/WP/Iss

IMFPower Hungry: How AI Will Drive Energy DemandThe development and deployment of large language models like ChatGPT across the world requires expanding data centers that consume vast amounts of electricity. Using descriptive statistics and a multi-country computable general equilibrium model (IMF-ENV), we examine how AI-driven data center growth affects electricity consumption, electricity prices, and carbon emissions. Our analysis of national accounts reveals AI-producing sectors in the U.S. have grown nearly triple the rate of the private non-farm business sector, with firm-level evidence showing electricity costs for vertically integrated AI companies nearly doubled between 2019-2023. Simulating AI scenarios in the IMF-ENV model based on projected data center power consumption up to 2030, we find the AI boom will cause manageable but varying increases in energy prices and emissions depending on policies and infrastructure constraints. Under scenarios with constrained growth in renewable energy capacity and limited expansion of transmission infrastructure, U.S. electricity prices could increase by 8.6%, while U.S. and global carbon emissions would rise by 5.5% and 1.2% respectively under current policies. Our findings highlight the importance of aligning energy policies with AI development to support this technological revolution, while mitigating environmental impacts.

The EU is close to reaching its climate goals despite a green backlash.

The EU is broadly within target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 55% by 2030 compared with 1990 levels, a victory for Brussels as it faces growing calls to weaken its environmental agenda.

The majority of the emissions drop will come from the energy sector, according to a tracker published by climate think-tank Ember.

mediafaro.org/article/20250525

Installing solar panels. | © Jana Rodenbusch/Reuters
The Financial Times · The EU is close to reaching its climate goals despite a green backlash.By Alice Hancock

New York invests $28.5 million in fast EV chargers to boost adoption
New York Governor Kathy Hochul announces $28.5 million funding to expand DC fast charging infrastructure, aligning with state climate goals and NEVI program standards.New York Governor Kat
redrobot.online/2025/01/new-yo
#HotTopic #EAuto #ChargingInfrastructure #ClimateGoals #ElectricVehicles #EV #GovernmentFunding #NEVIProgram #NewYork #sustainability

National climate plans are crucial documents that describe how a country intends to achieve its climate goals. The Dutch government has published its draft Climate Plan 2025-2035 for public consultation. To understand the role of individuals in the climate plan, we systematically reviewed how it addresses individual climate actions and behaviour change. 👉 Here are our lessons learned: linkedin.com/pulse/how-analyse. #climatechange #climategoals #climateplan #climateaction #participation

www.linkedin.comHow to Analyse National Climate Plans for Individual Climate Action and Behaviour ChangeNational climate plans are crucial documents that describe how a country intends to achieve its climate goals. The Dutch government has published its draft Climate Plan 2025-2035 for public consultation.

US Leads Global Surge in Oil and Gas Expansion, Analysis Finds

"#FossilFuel corporations, and the governments that support them, will never stop unless forced to. Neither has any interest in the future of the climate, our world, or their own kids." - Bill McGuire

by Edward Carver
Jul 24, 2024

"Five wealthy countries including the #UnitedStates have led a global surge in oil and gas development in 2024, threatening international #ClimateGoals, according to an analysis published by The Guardian on Wednesday.

"The U.S., #UnitedKingdom, #Canada, #Australia, and #Norway together are projected by the end of 2024 to have issued licenses for fossil fuel projects that will emit 11.9 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions over their lifetimes—far more than in any of the previous five years, and roughly equal to a full year of emissions from #China, the world's highest emitter—according to industry data analyzed by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (#IISD) and shared with the newspaper.

"The five states are responsible for more than two-thirds of all oil and gas licenses issued globally since 2020, with the U.S. alone accounting for half of the world total. President Joe Biden's administration increased oil and gas licensing by 20% over Trump-era levels, and issued a record 758 new extraction licenses in 2023, according to the analysis.

"'The U.S. has become a petrostate and is still, even under President #Biden, permitting new drilling,' John Sterman, a climate policy expert and professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology's business school, told The Guardian. 'The developed countries don't show any significant efforts to limit drilling.'

"Sterman pointed to a 'fundamental contradiction' between rich countries' international commitments and their ongoing fossil fuel expansion. 'We can't keep going on like this,' he said.

"The industry's grip on U.S. politicians has made significant policy change in Washington difficult. In the past decade, fossil fuel companies have spent $1.25 billion on federal #lobbying and more than $650 million on campaign contributions, according to #OpenSecrets data.

"The Conservative-led U.K. government issued a surge of #NorthSea licenses in the first half of this year, but lost power to the Labour Party following a general election earlier this month. It's not yet clear if Labour will be able or willing to rescind licenses already issued. Currently the U.K. is set to finish 2024 with 72 licenses for projects that would create 101 million metric tons of #GreenhouseGas emissions over their lifetimes—a 50-year high, according to the IISD analysis. Norway and Australia are also seeing major upticks this year.

"Capital expenditure at the world's largest oil companies is up 60% since 2020, with $302 billion projected to be spent on well development this year, The Guardian reported. The fossil fuel expansion continues even though the reserves in rich countries are generally hard to reach, as more accessible reserves have already been tapped.

"The expansion also comes in spite of disturbing climate news—2023 was hottest year on record, June was the 13th consecutive hottest month, and Monday was the hottest day, having broken a record set the previous day—and dire warnings from leading international institutions. No new fossil fuel projects can proceed if the world is to meet the 1.5° Paris agreement target, the International Energy Agency declared in 2021."

commondreams.org/news/wealthy-

Common Dreams · US Leads Global Surge in Oil and Gas Expansion, Analysis Finds | Common Dreams"The U.S. has become a petrostate and is still, even under President Biden, permitting new drilling," John Sterman of MIT said. "The developed countries don't show any significant efforts to limit drilling."
Continued thread

However, clear standards for “low-carbon” #hydrogen are still missing. To address this issue, the European Commission is currently developing detailed requirements for what qualifies as “low carbon” fuels, including hydrogen.

Our analysis shows the risks in draft EU rules and gives recommendations for the methodology to ensure that #low-carbon hydrogen can contribute to the EU’s energy security and #climategoals: 2/x