Miami Herald

Amazon bets $150B on data centers required for AI boom

- MATT DAY Bloomberg News

Inc. plans to spend almost $150 billion in the coming 15 years on data centers, giving the cloud-computing giant the firepower to handle an expected explosion in the demand for artificial intelligen­ce applicatio­ns and other digital services.

The huge spending is a show of force as the company looks to maintain its grip on the cloud services market, where it holds about twice the share of

No. 2 player Microsoft Corp. Sales growth at Amazon Web Services slowed to a record low last year as business customers cut costs and delayed modernizat­ion projects. Now spending is starting to pick up again, and Amazon is keen to secure land and electricit­y for its powerhungr­y facilities.

“We’re expanding capacity quite significan­tly,” said Kevin Miller, an AWS vice president who oversees the company’s data centers. “I think that just gives us the ability to get closer to customers.”

Over the past two years, according to a Bloomberg tally, Amazon has committed to spending $148 billion to build and operate data centers around the world. The company plans to expand existing server farm hubs in northern Virginia and Oregon as well as push into new precincts, including Mississipp­i, Saudi Arabia and Malaysia.

Amazon’s planned outlay on server farms dwarfs the public commitment­s from Microsoft and Alphabet Inc.’s Google, although neither company discloses data center-related spending as consistent­ly as Amazon does. Microsoft and Google spokespeop­le declined to provide comparable figures and added that each company is likely to include different costs in its estimates.

Amid broader cost-cutting at Amazon, AWS’s capital expenditur­e on data centers shrank 2% in 2023 – for the first time – even as Microsoft boosted its own spending by more than 50%, according to the research firm Dell’Oro Group. But Amazon’s chief financial officer said in February that capital expenditur­es would increase this year to support AWS growth, including AI-related projects.

Much of Amazon’s datacenter expansion is geared toward meeting a rise in demand for corporate services like file storage and databases. But the facilities, along with advanced and expensive chips, will also provide the massive computing power required for an expected boom in generative artificial intelligen­ce.

Microsoft, its close partner OpenAI and Google are widely seen as leaders in commercial­izing software capable of generating text and insights. But Amazon is building its own tools to rival OpenAI’s ChatGPT and has partnered with other companies to power AI services with its servers. As a result, Amazon exAmazon.com pects to reap tens of billions of dollars in AI-related revenue.

AWS put its first server farms in Virginia, on the fringes of metropolit­an Washington. Home to the first commercial interchang­e for web traffic, the area remains a crucial hub for video streaming and corporate and government data. Amazon later opened data centers in rural eastern Oregon, taking advantage of cheap hydroelect­ric power and ample tax breaks. Virginia and Oregon have since received about four of every five dollars AWS spends on U.S. infrastruc­ture.

Amazon plans to spend tens of billions more in those states, but it’s getting harder to secure electricit­y there. Data centers require enormous amount of power, and their growing ubiquity is putting pressure on utilities. For a few months in 2022, Dominion Energy Inc., which powers Virginia’s data center alley, couldn’t keep up, pausing connection­s to facilities that were otherwise ready to come online. The utility expects demand to nearly double over the next 15 years, with the growth driven primarily by data centers.

In Oregon, electricit­y use by Amazon server farms exceeds the local utility’s share of hydroelect­ric power, forcing it to buy electricit­y generated by natural gas, the Oregonian newspaper reported this year.

“There’s a lot more vetting that is occurring upfront and detailed planning that is required from the utility companies to understand how real the project is because there’s so much demand out there that was not there five years ago,” said Ali Greenwood, an executive director at the data center practice of Cushman & Wakefield, a commercial real estate firm.

So Amazon is becoming creative.

In February, the company said it would spend about $10 billion on two data-center campuses in Mississipp­i. Billed as the largest corporate project in state history, AWS’s effort will plant roots in the southern U.S., a region that has seen comparativ­ely little data-center spending outside of major cities like Dallas and Atlanta.

Last month, the operator of a 40-year-old nuclear power plant on the Susquehann­a River in Pennsylvan­ia said AWS had agreed to spend $650 million to acquire a data center campus connected to the facility.

In Round Rock, Texas, AWS recently won zoning approval to build a data center and electrical substation next to a delivery depot on a slice of a former ranch the company acquired during a pandemicer­a spending surge. If the project proceeds, it will be the first time the company has put such facilities on the same piece of land.

“Right now it’s just a mad scramble for any place that has power any time soon,” said Charles Fitzgerald, a former Microsoft manager and Seattle-based investor who tracks cloud company spending.

Even as it ramps up, Amazon and other companies are encounteri­ng growing opposition to data centers. Much of the current animus is centered in Virginia, where residents complain about server farms’ incessant hum and preservati­onists lament the sprawling facilities’ encroachme­nt on Civil War battlefiel­d sites. But pockets of resistance are popping up in other parts of the U.S. and could grow as more data centers come online – whether built by Amazon or others.

Renewable-energy advocates also say the rush to build facilities has given new life to old plants powered by planet-warming fossil fuels, and even helped make the case to build new ones. In Mississipp­i, for example, Amazon will pay to help the local utility to build solar farms, but the company will also operate the data centers with a new naturalgas power plant that will probably operate for decades.

“Companies like Amazon are going to have to use their buying power to actually force the utilities to change their behavior,” said Daniel Tait, the research and communicat­ions manager with the Energy and Policy Institute, a utility watchdog that backs renewables. “Not only are they inducing more fossil fuel use, but they are creating the precedent that everybody who comes after them will do the same.”

In recent years, Amazon has been the world’s largest corporate buyer of renewable energy, part of a pledge to power all of its operations with renewable electricit­y by 2025. But those projects can be far from its data centers, a mismatch between supply and demand that bedevils the fractured and aging U.S. power grid.

 ?? JOHN ANGELILLO UPI file ?? Amazon and others are meeting opposition to data centers, with much of the animus focused in Virginia and involving noise and encroachme­nt on Civil War battlefiel­d sites.
JOHN ANGELILLO UPI file Amazon and others are meeting opposition to data centers, with much of the animus focused in Virginia and involving noise and encroachme­nt on Civil War battlefiel­d sites.

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