Generative AI education, computer, medical, entertainment etc. had a significant impact on the fields. However, all these advances come with a hefty price tag. That’s the amount of electricity these systems burn, plus the insane amount of water needed to keep them cool frankly disgusting.
For context, In 2024, Microsoft and Google’s electricity consumption will exceed that of more than 100 countries.. Likewise, OpenAI’s GPT-4 AI model takes up to 3 water bottles to generate 100 words..
Earlier this month, Microsoft shared an interesting concept that could solve water-related problems. AI. CEO Satya Nadella of the technology giant a fluid loop in data centerswhich is filled once. As a result, the water consumption of the company’s data centers has been significantly reduced “What a single restaurant would use.”
Now it looks like NVIDIA is taking a page from Microsoft’s playbook. Speaking at London Climate Week on Monday, the senior executive suggested the company’s solution could address the water challenges associated with the data center development. next generation AI infrastructure.
The executive further revealed that the company’s next-generation AI infrastructure can be fully cooled with just enough hot liquid to reduce the need for additional cooling equipment (Axios).
According to Josh Parker, NVIDIA’s Chief Sustainability Officer:
“The problem of water consumption for data centers is largely solved.”
How does this liquid work? It is basically a recirculated mixture of water and propylene — think car antifreeze. It is worth noting that the system can operate at temperatures up to 113 degrees Fahrenheit.
Thus, it allows reliable operation in warmer environments compared to older systems. In practical terms, data centers equipped with NVIDIA’s next-generation AI infrastructure will require significantly less water and energy for cooling, reducing both operating costs and environmental impact.
The announcement comes at a time of growing concerns about water and energy use as data centers continue to expand in community corridors. Microsoft seems to have accepted “Community-First” AI infrastructurewhich addresses some of them from issues raised by the communities themselves, including reducing water consumption and pledging not to increase electricity bills.
Elsewhere, Microsoft’s plan to build $1 billion data center in Kenya stopped suddenly in early May after the government reneged on Microsoft’s commitment to cover the annual capacity costs required to run Azure in the region. President William Ruto noted that the facility’s power requirements would be so large that it would effectively require “Turn off half the country” to keep it running.
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