San Francisco Chronicle

Tech giants build greener Internet despite Trump

- By David R. Baker

President-elect Donald Trump may question the need to use more renewable power, but a growing number of Internet companies don’t.

A report issued Tuesday by the Greenpeace environmen­tal group finds that many of the world’s largest Internet companies — including Apple, Facebook and Google — have made major progress powering their online operations with renewable energy.

Almost 20 have committed to running their data centers and other facilities on 100 percent renewable energy as a way to fight global warming, although they differ on timetables and details.

Yet other companies are opening energy-hungry data centers in states and countries that still derive most of their electricit­y from coal-fired power plants, which release more greenhouse gases than plants burning natural gas. And China’s fast-growing Internet titans — such as Alibaba and Baidu — generally don’t say where they get their electricit­y, according to Greenpeace.

“On the positive side, you see a race going on to build a renewable-powered Internet,” said Gary Cook, a Greenpeace analyst and lead author of the

report.

“We see a lot of renewable energy deals, showing those companies are following through on their commitment­s — and that’s great,” he said. “On the flip side, we still see pretty poor transparen­cy from a lot of companies.”

When Greenpeace first began studying the energy sources used by Internet companies, in 2009, none had yet publicly committed to 100 percent renewable power, he said.

Now, in 2017, Google plans to buy as much renewable power as the company uses worldwide. Since Google operates in some countries where renewable power remains scarce, the company will buy more than it needs in places where it is plentiful and sell any excess electricit­y on the open market.

Informatio­n technology already consumes about 7 percent of the electricit­y generated around the world, according to the report. And that demand will grow as more of the Earth’s population goes online and video streaming services surge.

The report gives high marks to Facebook, Apple and Google, who have used their purchasing power to help create a renewable energy market that other Internet companies can tap.

Other big names in the industry, however, receive harsher scores.

The report, for example, takes to task Amazon Web Services, the world’s largest cloudcompu­ting operation. The Amazon subsidiary has been adding data centers in places such as Virginia with little renewable power. And it doesn’t release enough informatio­n about its energy use and greenhouse gas emissions for outsiders to gauge the effectiven­ess of the steps it has taken to combat climate change, according to Greenpeace.

The report even refers to Amazon Web Services as “one of the single biggest obstacles” to transparen­cy about renewable power use.

Amazon has adopted a goal of deriving 100 percent of its electricit­y from renewable sources, although it has not set a deadline to reach that mark. The company plans to hit 50 percent by the end of this year and in November announced plans to fund constructi­on of five new solar power plants in Virginia.

Asked to comment on the report, an Amazon spokeswoma­n pointed to some of the company’s recent announceme­nts on renewable power projects.

Other prominent tech companies receiving poor grades from Greenpeace include Netflix and Twitter. Neither responded to a request for comment from The Chronicle.

While Greenpeace hopes to prod more Internet companies into action, it also wants such leaders as Google, Apple and Facebook to advocate in public for renewable power policies once Trump takes office. Trump has pledged to revive the American coal industry and has stocked both his transition team and his cabinet picks with people who have questioned climate science or tried to block efforts to rein in greenhouse gases.

“The federal government in the U.S. is going to be at best agnostic about energy and possibly hostile to climate policy, so corporatio­ns really have to get more engaged and push,” Cook said. “Companies who have been leading and who have made these commitment­s need to speak up and say, ‘This is important to us.’”

 ?? Tim Boyles Photograph­y / Google ?? Windmills at a wind farm in Minco, Okla., provide Google with some of its renewable energy. The company, along with Facebook and Apple, gets high marks from Greenpeace for its renewable energy use.
Tim Boyles Photograph­y / Google Windmills at a wind farm in Minco, Okla., provide Google with some of its renewable energy. The company, along with Facebook and Apple, gets high marks from Greenpeace for its renewable energy use.

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