AIAPJun 3

Assessing the Carbon Emissions and Energy Consumption of U.S. Hyperscale Data Centers

arXiv:2606.0542053.4
Predicted impact top 66% in AI · last 90 daysOriginality Synthesis-oriented
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Provides the first comprehensive, facility-level attribution of carbon emissions for U.S. hyperscale data centers, informing policymakers and the public about their environmental impact.

This study estimates that U.S. hyperscale data centers consumed 68-99 TWh of electricity and emitted 37-54 million metric tons of CO2 in 2024-2025, with a carbon intensity 48% higher than the national grid average.

The rapid proliferation of hyperscale data centers (HDCs) in the US, mainly driven by the adoption of artificial intelligence, has raised concerns about this industry's environmental footprint. We compiled facility-level information on 403 US hyperscale data centers operating between May 2024 and April 2025 and estimated their electricity consumption, electricity sources, and attributable CO2 emissions. Across different facility-load scenarios, these HDCs consumed approximately 68-99 TWh of electricity and were associated with about 37-54 million metric tons of CO2. Under the central scenario, HDC electricity demand corresponded to approximately 1.8% of total US electricity consumption, with roughly 54% of attributed generation supplied by fossil-fuel sources. The HDC electricity-weighted average carbon intensity was approximately 545 gCO2/kWh, about 48% above the contemporaneous US national grid-average carbon intensity of 370 gCO2/kWh. Our approach provides an attributional tool for assessing the environmental footprint of hyperscale data centers using the most recent EPA eGRID plant-level data.

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