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Google’s partnership with Elementl Power to develop three advanced nuclear energy sites represents a significant move by tech giants into nuclear energy production, addressing the massive power demands of AI development. The collaboration highlights a growing trend of tech companies investing in reliable carbon-free energy sources as states increasingly adopt legislation supporting nuclear power expansion. This investment underscores the strategic importance of securing sustainable energy infrastructure to support the computational requirements of next-generation AI technologies.

The big picture: Google is investing capital in Elementl Power to develop three 600-megawatt nuclear energy project sites, aiming to support growing power demands from artificial intelligence development.

Key details: The partnership announced Wednesday involves Google providing capital for three advanced nuclear energy projects, though specific investment figures weren’t disclosed.

  • Each project will have 600 megawatts of power capacity, creating substantial energy resources for data center operations.
  • The collaboration aims to provide carbon-free baseload electricity that can reliably power AI computing needs.

What they’re saying: Google’s head of data center energy, Amanda Peterson Corio, emphasized the strategic importance of the partnership for technological advancement.

  • “Our collaboration with Elementl Power enhances our ability to move at the speed required to meet this moment of AI and American innovation,” she stated.
  • Chris Colbert, Elementl Power’s Chairman and CEO, added: “We look forward to working with Google to execute these projects and bring safe, carbon-free, baseload electricity to the grid.”

Industry trends: Major tech companies are increasingly investing in nuclear energy production as AI development drives unprecedented electricity demands.

  • Amazon has also invested in small nuclear reactors, while Constellation Energy plans to restart the Three Mile Island nuclear plant specifically to power Microsoft’s data centers.
  • Tech companies are diversifying their energy portfolios with investments across nuclear, solar, and wind technologies.

Policy landscape: State governments are actively creating regulatory environments to attract tech industry power projects.

  • Twenty-five states passed legislation supporting advanced nuclear energy last year alone.
  • Over 200 nuclear energy supportive bills have been introduced this year, reflecting growing political momentum behind nuclear power expansion.

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