Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Requested last week The General Comment from the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHGP) does not appear to the naked eye to be a huge win for the tech giant. In fact, it sounds almost biblical. But for Google and Microsoft, advertisement It marks a major win in their years-long battle against their rivals over how to account for carbon emissions from data centers and, by extension, artificial intelligence.
The announcement shows that the GHGP is one step closer to implementing a mandatory hourly accounting method for electricity emissions, a carbon accounting system that Google and Microsoft have been calling for since 2020 and 2021 respectively.
“We support the proposed Scope 2 updates, which would increase the accuracy of carbon inventories and their impact on decarbonization,” says Mara Harris, a Google spokeswoman. Microsoft declined to comment.
While Google is celebrating the GHGP’s move, other emissions players, even those traditionally aligned with Google’s preferred carbon accounting methodology, note that the battle to get to this point hasn’t been all pretty.
“There’s intense lobbying going on here, and these big companies have bet their reputations and their money big, and they’ve gotten a little ugly,” says Jesse Jenkins, an assistant professor at Princeton University and head of the Google-funded ZERO (Zero-Carbon Energy Systems Research and Improvement) Lab.
Range 2 is Subcategory Used by GHGP to calculate a company’s indirect emissions resulting from the purchase of electricity, steam, heat or cooling. For tech giants, Scope 2 emissions I rose Artificial intelligence has led to tremendous growth in energy use in data centers. As these burdens have increased, so have the pressures to find a new way to account for them.
GHGP has announced its intention to review and eventually accept its Scope 2 accounting standards at the end of 2022. $9.25 million grant from the Bezos Land Fund. Suddenly, the battle between the tech giants has spilled from the white papers into the real world, with a GHGP-sponsored “working group” set to work out the details of what the new standards should look like.
However, some believe it was not a fair fight at all.
“Our understanding was that we would have a forum for ideas to move back and forth,” says a working group member and proponent of an alternative form of Scope 2 accounting, known as “Emissions First,” who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “It seemed (from the beginning) like it was well set up for where it was going to go.”