美国科技公司承诺在白宫,承担数据中心能源成本。
US tech firms pledge at White House to bear costs of energy for datacenters

原始链接: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/04/us-tech-companies-energy-cost-pledge-white-house

大型科技公司——谷歌、微软、Meta、亚马逊等——在白宫签署了“纳税人保护承诺”,承诺承担为其不断增长的数据中心所需的新的电力生产成本。此举旨在解决数据中心能源需求导致消费者和企业电力成本上升的担忧。 该承诺包括公司建设新的电力来源或扩建现有来源,资助电网升级,并与公用事业公司协商特殊的费率协议。这项倡议由特朗普宣布,旨在为数据中心项目争取社区支持,这些项目最近因能源消耗而面临当地反对。 虽然被誉为对可负担性和电网弹性的胜利,但一些专家质疑,将重点放在化石燃料而非可再生能源上是否会阻碍能源供应的快速增长。该承诺的有效性还有待观察,倡导者呼吁采取更强有力的保护措施,以防止与数据中心开发相关的电费上涨。

最近一项白宫倡议促使美国科技公司承诺承担其数据中心的能源成本,但Hacker News上的评论员对此普遍表示怀疑。普遍观点认为,这项“承诺”不具约束力,只是一场公关活动——本质上是“说说而已”,缺乏真正的执行机制。 讨论的中心是“承诺”的法律定义,一些人指出其通常含义与贷款抵押品有关,而另一些人则争论了人工智能生成的法律定义的准确性(特别是Claude的)。 许多人认为,此举不会带来重大改变,最终消费者将承担这些成本。人们也对依赖Claude等人工智能工具表示担忧,因为美国政府已经警告了潜在的供应链风险。总而言之,人们的看法是,这项倡议更注重表面形象,而非真正致力于可持续能源实践。
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原文

Google, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and several artificial intelligence companies signed a pledge at the White House on Wednesday to bear the cost of new electricity generation to power their datacenters.

The agreement is meant to help mitigate concerns that big tech’s datacenters are driving up US electricity costs for homes and small businesses at a time the administration of Donald Trump is seeking to curb inflation.

“This means that the tech companies and the datacenters will be able to get the electricity they need, all without driving up electricity costs for consumers,” the president said at the pledge signing event. “This is a historic win for countless American families and we’ll also make our electricity grid stronger and more resilient than ever before.”

The so-called “Ratepayer Protection Pledge” was first announced by Trump in his State of the Union address, and comes as communities and state legislators increase scrutiny of rapidly proliferating datacenters.

Datacenters consume vast amounts of electricity to run server racks and cooling systems for the development of technologies such as artificial intelligence.

“Some datacenters were rejected by communities for that, and now I think it’s going to be just the opposite,” Trump said, referencing cancelled or postponed projects in recent months across several states after local opposition.

The pledge includes a commitment by technology companies to bring or buy electricity supplies for their datacenters, either from new power plants or existing plants with expanded output capacity. It also includes commitments from big tech to pay for upgrades to power delivery systems and to enter special electricity rate agreements with utilities.

The effort is aimed at drawing support from towns and cities that otherwise oppose the projects, said the Trump official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“There will be no new datacenter development that’s going to happen without the local communities reading and understanding what this pledge is,” the official said.

Oracle, xAI and OpenAI were also in attendance to sign the pledge.

The initiative is being launched ahead of the November midterm elections, with voters increasingly concerned about energy affordability and the increased strain on the country’s power grids from datacenters.

Companies represented at the White House include some of the biggest names in the tech sector, which are investing billions in new AI computing capacity that draws vast amounts of electricity.

Trump has urged those firms to build or secure dedicated power capacity to meet demand rather than relying solely on regional grids, part of a broader effort to balance technological competitiveness with political and economic concerns about energy costs.

It’s not clear, however, that the effort will get new supplies of electricity built quickly enough to ease pressure on grids, said Jon Gordon, who is a senior director at Advanced Energy United, a clean energy trade group that includes some datacenters.

That’s in part due to Trump’s policy focus on increasing natural gas and other fossil fuel-fired power for datacenters, instead of quicker-build sources like solar and wind, he added.

“The real problem is the inability to get generation online fast enough to meet the datacenter demand,” Gordon said. “Hyperscalers paying for the generation doesn’t get it online any faster.“

Advocates and critics alike will be watching closely to see whether the pledge produces concrete commitments or remains largely symbolic, as lawmakers and consumer groups have called for stronger protections to prevent utility bill increases tied to datacenter build-outs.

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