Meeting our match: Buying 100 percent
renewable energy By Urs Hölzle, Google Senior Vice President, Technical Infrastructure April 9, 2018
What do we mean by “matching” renewable energy? Over the course of 2017, across the globe, for every kilowatt hour of electricity we consumed, we purchased a kilowatt hour of renewable energy from a wind or solar farm that was built specifically for Google. This makes us the first public Cloud, and company of our size, to have achieved this feat. Today, we have contracts to purchase three gigawatts (3GW) of output from renewable energy projects; no corporate purchaser buys more renewable energy than we do. To date, our renewable energy contracts have led to over $3 billion in new capital investment around the world. The road to 100 percent
We've been working toward this goal for
a long time.
At the outset of last year, we felt
confident that 2017 was the year we'd meet
it. Every year, we sign contracts for new
renewable energy generation projects in
markets where we have operations. From the
time we sign a contract, it takes one to two
years to build the wind farm or solar field
before it begins producing energy. In 2016,
our operational projects produced enough
renewables to cover 57 percent of the energy
we used from global utilities. That same
year, we signed a record number of new
contracts for wind and solar developments
that were still under construction. Those
projects began operating in 2017—and that
additional output of renewable energy was
enough to cover more than 100 percent of
what we used during the whole year.
We say that we “matched” our energy usage
because it’s not yet possible to “power” a
company of our scale by 100 percent
renewable energy. It’s true that for every
kilowatt-hour of energy we consume, we add a
matching kilowatt-hour of renewable energy
to a power grid somewhere. But that
renewable energy may be produced in a
different place, or at a different time,
from where we’re running our data centers
and offices. What’s important to us is that
we are adding new clean energy sources to
the electrical system, and that we’re buying
that renewable energy in the same amount as
what we’re consuming, globally and on an
annual basis.
Looking ahead
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