The New York Times has claimed that a renewed spike in energy usage in the United States is being driven by solar panes and electric vehicles, now claiming that such usage “could also jeopardize the country’s plans to fight climate change.”
“The numbers we’re seeing are pretty crazy,” Daniel Brooks of the Electric Power Research Institute told the Times for its Thursday report. The paper calls the situation “an ironic twist,” and says that more fossil fuels may be needed to fulfill demand.
“…[D]ata centers and factories need power 24 hours a day, something wind and solar can’t do alone,” the report states, adding that the, “growth of remote work, video streaming and online shopping has led to a frenzied expansion of data centers across the nation.”
“The rise of artificial intelligence is poised to accelerate that trend: By 2030, electricity demand at U.S. data centers could triple, using as much power as 40 million homes, according to Boston Consulting Group.”
“Millions of Americans are also buying plug-in vehicles and electric heat pumps for their homes, spurred by recent federal incentives. In California, one-fifth of new cars sold are electric, and officials estimate that E.V.s could account for 10 percent of power use during peak hours by 2035.”



