Nvidia, Microsoft, and AWS join utilities firms to launch an AI power grid consortium

At Nvidia’s developer conference on Thursday, a large group of energy companies—along with a few technology companies—announced plans to collaborate on building AI models and apps aimed at improving the generation and distribution of electric power. 

The initiative, called the Open Power AI Consortium, is organized by the Palo Alto-based Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). Founding members include Nvidia, Microsoft, AWS, and Oracle. Notably absent from the group are all of the leading developers of frontier AI models, such as Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI. 

“This is about getting the right data, and getting it clean, so that it can be used for AI,” Jeremy Renshaw, who leads the consortium at EPRI, tells Fast Company. Renshaw says energy companies have mountains of data, but organizing it in a way that AI models can process is key. 

But already, more than two dozen regional power companies in the U.S. have signed on, including Con Edison, Duke Energy, New York Power Authority, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Southern California Edison, Tennessee Valley Authority, and Westinghouse Electric Company.

EPRI president and CEO Arshad Mansoor said in a statement that the consortium will create an AI model, datasets, and apps to “enhance grid reliability, optimize asset performance, and enable more efficient energy management.” It will also foster a collaborative environment where utilities, startups, academics, and national labs can work together to address power-sector challenges using AI.

The consortium doesn’t include representatives from government agencies, but Renshaw said he’d like to see their inclusion. “We intend to include anyone involved in the making and moving of electricity,” he says. “Government is important because they do the permitting, licensing, and they provide regulations.”

The announcement comes amid growing concern in the tech sector over the strain that AI workloads can place on data centers. (Google even pledged last year to buy energy from small modular reactors developed by Kairos Power to support its growing AI ambitions.)

Axios climate reporter Alex Freedman notes that the power demands of the so-called AI boom have become a top priority for energy company CEOs in the U.S. Freedman highlights an ongoing debate within that sector over whether the power demands of AI will prolong the use of fossil fuels. Should that prove to be the case, AI could further push back constructive work toward climate goals.


https://www.fastcompany.com/91303256/nvidia-microsoft-aws-utilities-firms-ai-power-grid-consortium?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Létrehozva 5mo | 2025. márc. 20. 21:50:02


Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be

EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban

Why AI surveillance cameras keep getting it wrong

Last year, Transport for London tested AI-powered CCTV at Willesden Gr

2025. aug. 25. 13:20:05 | Fast company - tech
The gap between AI hype and newsroom reality

Although AI is changing the media, how much it’s

2025. aug. 25. 10:50:11 | Fast company - tech
Big Tech locks data away. Wikidata gives it back to the internet

While tech and AI giants guard their knowledge graphs behind proprieta

2025. aug. 25. 10:50:10 | Fast company - tech
Another AI tool won’t solve your problems. But AI training might

Every company wants to have an AI strategy: A bold vision to do more w

2025. aug. 25. 10:50:08 | Fast company - tech
Smarter AI is supercharging battery innovation 

The global race for better batteries has never been more intense. Electric vehicles, drones, and next-generation aircraft all depend on high-performance energy storage—yet the traditiona

2025. aug. 24. 11:40:14 | Fast company - tech
AI passed the aesthetic Turing Test, raising big questions for art

Pick up an August 2025 issue of Vogue, and you’ll come across an advertisement for the brand Guess featur

2025. aug. 24. 9:20:14 | Fast company - tech
This word-search website is the brain boost you never knew you needed

Language is the original technology, the tool we’ve all used to coordinate with each other for thousands of years. Our success in life—both professionally and in relationships—depends on it.

2025. aug. 24. 0:10:13 | Fast company - tech