Google is funding electrician training to help meet the power demands of AI

Google has announced that it's helping to financially support the electrical training ALLIANCe (etA), an organization formed by the National Electrical Contractors Association and the International Brotherhood of Electricians. The goal is to train "100,000 electrical workers and 30,000 new apprentices in the United States" to meet the growing power demands of AI.

Using AI will unlock unspecified, but positive economic opportunities, Google's new white paper, "Powering a New Era of American Innovation," claims. In order to take advantage of them, though, the US power grid needs to become more capable and efficient. That's largely because the data centers used to run and train AI models require vast amounts of energy. The white paper claims that new data centers could demand an additional "15-90 GW" of energy by 2030, something that more efficient chips and model training can't account for. For a sense of the scale, the US Department of Energy says 1 Gigawatt is the equivalent to 103 offshore wind turbines. 

Google's paper calls for investments in alternative energy sources like nuclear power, but also notes that expanding the electrical workforce is necessary. "McKinsey estimates that 130,000 additional electricians will be needed by 2030 to build out data centers and manufacturing facilities," the company writes. Currently, though, retiring electricians outnumber newly trained ones. "Nearly 10,000 American electricians either retire or change careers each year, while only about 7,000 new entrants join the field."

Investing in electrical training is Google's attempt to help change that. It would be nice if it was paired with a clearer explanation around what that AI will be doing with all that extra power — Google notes that there's a "causal relationship between energy consumption and economic growth" — but skilled job training isn't a bad thing.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/google-is-funding-electrician-training-to-help-meet-the-power-demands-of-ai-221320678.html?src=rss https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/google-is-funding-electrician-training-to-help-meet-the-power-demands-of-ai-221320678.html?src=rss
Creado 4mo | 30 abr 2025, 23:30:12


Inicia sesión para agregar comentarios

Otros mensajes en este grupo.

The Sonos Era 300 speaker is 20 percent off right now

No matter how old you get, the back-to-school season will always bring a desire to shop. So, sales at this time

3 sept 2025, 15:40:31 | Engadget
Google will reveal more Gemini smart home plans and devices on October 1

Google is set to reveal more information about its "Gemini for Home" plans, including new Nest devices designed for the AI assistant, the company

3 sept 2025, 15:40:29 | Engadget
European court rules in favor of the latest US and EU data transfer framework

Europe’s second-highest court has dismissed a challenge against

3 sept 2025, 15:40:28 | Engadget
Samsung announces a pair of flashy new party speakers

It’s shaping up to be a good week for people who like enormous party speakers. Hot on the heels of

3 sept 2025, 15:40:26 | Engadget
reMarkable’s Paper Pro Move is a pocketable version of its e-paper tablet

reMarkable knows you’d like to use its e-paper tablet on the go, but the size of its current products don’t make that easy. To address this, it’s launching a smaller, pocket-sized version of its fl

3 sept 2025, 13:30:11 | Engadget
The best MagSafe power banks for your iPhone

One of the first guides I ever worked on for Engadget was about power banks. In

3 sept 2025, 13:30:09 | Engadget
Ooni's Volt V2 oven uses 'Pizza Intelligence' to cook your pie more evenly

In the latest case of AI being shoehorned into everything, say hello to

3 sept 2025, 13:30:07 | Engadget