Caroline O'Doherty
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yes, Clare, it says what we've known here in Ireland is
about the extraordinary electricity demands of data centres.
But when you kind of see it in this international report and where, if you like, top of the class for being bottom of the class of what not to do, it does put a kind of a new light on it.
This report, it makes the point that, you know, look, data centres are with us.
AI is expanding massively and they call it data centres are the physical infrastructure for artificial intelligence.
And if you're going to accommodate that
In any country, you have to look at the environmental impacts.
And one of the environmental impacts comes from the energy use, which is electricity in Ireland's case.
At the moment, the data centres that we have are using more than a fifth of all the electricity generated in the country.
All the extra data centres that have permission to connect to the electricity grid when they get going,
they'll be then taking up about a third or more of all the electricity in the country.
And then we have a whole load of new data centres that want to be built.
We have data centre backers who want to develop them.
So we have this issue because the electricity supply hasn't been keeping up.
We're trying to decarbonise the electricity system here.
So we're trying to switch over from mainly burning gas to generate electricity, some oil too in emergencies, if you like.
And we have renewables, we have wind and we have solar.
But we're kind of stuck at this kind of wind and solar can't, if you like, we want to get that to at least 80% of all our electricity generation and then get it to 100%.
In a relatively short space of time, we want to make those leaps.
But if the electricity demand keeps growing, which is by data centres, it's very hard to make that change when you're also just trying to keep up with electricity demand.