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Google funds electrician training as AI power crunch increases

Google announced on Wednesday that it would fund the training of up to tens-of-thousands of new U.S. electrical workers as Big Tech continues its push into the power industry in the United States, searching for the huge amounts of electricity required for its AI expansion.

Lack of power supply is the main problem facing giant technology companies that are racing to develop artificial Intelligence in energy-intensive Data Centers, which is driving up U.S. Electricity Demand after nearly 20 years stagnation.

Donald Trump declared a national emergency to speed up the approval process for transmission and generation projects.

Google's funding includes a grant of $10 million for electrical worker non-profits. This is the latest move by technology giants to reduce the backlog in power projects and the electricity shortages in the United States.

Microsoft, for example, announced last year it would partner up with Constellation in order to restart the reactor at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant in Pennsylvania. This plant was the site of the worst nuclear incident to ever occur on American soil. The reactor will be used to power its data centers.

According to a study backed by the Department of Energy, data centers in the U.S. could triple their electricity use over the next three year to account for 12% of all the country's consumption.

In order to meet demand, the nation will need additional power plants, transmission systems, and workforces. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the market for electricians will grow by 6% per year in the next seven.

The Google grant is being used to fund electrician apprenticeship programs, and training of current workforce, through organizations such as the Electrical Training Alliance International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the National Electrical Contractors Association.

The company claimed that it could increase the pipeline for electrical workers by 70 percent by the end decade.

Kenneth Cooper (international president of IBEW) said, "This initiative will bring in more than 100,000 electricians to the trade who are desperately needed for the AI-driven surge of data centers and power production."

Google announced earlier this month that it would be partnering with PJM Interconnection, the largest regional U.S. electric grid, to use artificial intelligence technology in order to connect new power lines and electricity supplies faster. It has signed the first corporate agreement to buy energy from small nuclear reactors as well as advanced geothermal power for its data centres.

On Wednesday, the company will release a paper on how to accelerate the expansion of grid.

This white paper is the first report to include policy recommendations for supporting new energy technologies such as small modular reactors or advanced geothermal. Among the proposals are cost-overruns protections for advanced reactors via the Department of Energy Loan Program Office; accelerating permits at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission; and bolstering a nuclear fuel supply in the United States.

The paper recommends that Congress also take action in order to speed up certain permits for carbon capture and the building of transmission lines, as well as to support technologies which increase the efficiency of the existing grid.

(source: Reuters)