Google Turns to Nuclear to Power AI Data Centres
Google has signed a deal to use small nuclear reactors to generate the vast amounts of energy needed to power its artificial intelligence (AI) data centres.
BBC reports that the company says the agreement with Kairos Power will see it start using the first reactor this decade and bring more online by 2035.
The companies did not give any details about how much the deal is worth or where the plants will be built.
Technology firms are increasingly turning to nuclear sources of energy to supply the electricity used by the huge data centres that drive AI.
Kairos executive Jeff Olson, said the deal with Google is important to accelerate the commercialization of advanced nuclear energy by demonstrating the technical and market viability of a solution critical to decarbonizing power grids.
The plans still have to be approved by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission as well as local agencies before they are allowed to proceed.
Last year, US regulators gave California-based Kairos Power the first permit in 50 years to build a new type of nuclear reactor.
Nuclear power, which is virtually carbon free and provides electricity 24 hours a day, has become increasingly attractive to the tech industry as it attempts to cut emissions even as it uses more energy.