Emerald AI has raised $24.5 million in funding from high-profile investors including Nvidia, former climate envoy John Kerry, and Kleiner Perkins chair John Doerr to develop technology that makes data centers more flexible power consumers. The startup’s platform allows grid managers to remotely reduce AI data center power consumption by up to 25% during peak demand periods without affecting AI performance, potentially transforming data centers from grid burdens into “grid allies.”
The big picture: Energy demand has emerged as the primary constraint limiting AI growth, with the Department of Energy predicting that U.S. data center electricity consumption could nearly triple over three years, reaching 12% of total national output by 2028.
Why this matters: The AI boom is driving up greenhouse gas emissions and knocking tech companies off their net-zero climate goals, while communities fear rising electricity rates and grid instability from massive new data centers.
How it works: Emerald’s platform applies demand-side management principles specifically to data centers, giving power system managers unprecedented flexibility during peak usage periods.
In plain English: Think of the electricity grid like a highway system that must be built to handle rush hour traffic. Normally, data centers are like massive trucks that always demand full lanes, even during the busiest times. Emerald’s technology turns these data centers into smart vehicles that can temporarily use less space when the highway gets crowded, without slowing down their actual work.
What they’re saying: Political and business leaders are framing AI energy needs as a national security priority.
The broader impact: Sivaram believes this technology can address three major community concerns about data centers: rising electricity rates, grid crashes, and reliance on dirty diesel generators for backup power.