亚马逊的电力短缺说明了为什么人工智能需要核能。
Amazon's Power Shortage Makes The Case For Why AI Needs Nuclear

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/amazons-power-shortage-makes-case-why-ai-needs-nuclear

人工智能和云计算的快速发展给美国的电网带来了巨大压力,暴露了对增加和可靠电源的迫切需求。最近的纠纷,例如亚马逊针对太平洋电力公司(PacifiCorp)因俄勒冈州数据中心电力不足的投诉,凸显了这一日益严重的问题。 预计到2035年,计算领域的电力需求将增加一倍以上,这将导致科技公司与公用事业公司之间产生依赖关系——后者担心电网过度扩张和成本上升。因此,创新解决方案正在获得关注,特别是新型核技术。 美国第一核公司计划在印第安纳州建设自给自足的反应堆,旨在为数据中心供电,重点是废物回收和能源安全。这些先进反应堆利用液态金属技术,代表了一种可扩展、可靠的电力解决方案,以支持人工智能的繁荣并维持稳定的能源成本。核心信息很明确:数字化增长的速度超过了当前的基础设施,而核电正在成为未来电网的关键组成部分。

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原文

As we have been consistently highlighting on Zero Hedge for the better part of the last two years, rapid growth in artificial intelligence and cloud computing is testing America’s electric grid and exposing the urgent need for new, always-available power.

The most recent example highlighted by Bloomberg was a case where Amazon has accused PacifiCorp, a Berkshire Hathaway–owned utility, of failing to deliver enough electricity for four planned data-center campuses in Oregon.

In a complaint to state regulators, the company said PacifiCorp provided too little power to one site, “no power” to a second, and “has refused to even complete its own standard contracting process for the third and fourth Data Center Campuses.” PacifiCorp argues it must protect “customer affordability,” saying: “We are open to ongoing discussions with Amazon to reach a resolution that achieves balanced outcomes for all customers.”

As President Donald Trump pushes to accelerate AI infrastructure, power demand from computing is forecast to more than double in the US by 2035, according to BloombergNEF. Utilities and tech giants now depend on each other — but utilities worry about straining the grid and raising bills if the AI boom falters.

That’s why new nuclear options are gaining attention. Another recent example highlighted by Bloomberg: First American Nuclear Co. plans to build self-sustaining reactors in Indiana to power data centers. The plant will begin with natural gas in 2028, then shift to a 240-megawatt liquid-metal fast reactor by 2032 that can reprocess its own spent fuel.

“Data centers are driving the demand for power,” said CEO Mike Reinboth.

The company aims to deploy six such systems, enough to power 1.5 million homes. Its technology uses lead-bismuth coolant — a design tested for years in Russian submarines. By recycling spent uranium, the reactors would slash waste costs and improve energy security. “The waste actually gives you energy,” said founder Bill Stokes.

From Oregon to Indiana, the message is consistent: digital growth is outpacing the grid. To keep AI running — and keep consumer costs stable — the U.S. will need reliable, scalable power. Nuclear is increasingly stepping in as the only technology that can provide it.

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