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The Verge's 'Version History' podcast explores how Keurig revolutionized office coffee with its single-cup brewers, but also examines the environmental and cultural costs of K-Cups as the brand struggles to keep pace with modern coffee culture.
An analysis of California's dairy digester carbon offset program reveals that swapping methane for CO₂ may reduce short-term warming but locks in long-term warming, highlighting flaws in climate credit math.
The article examines the water crisis driven by AI data centers, noting that cooling concentrates thermal load in single watersheds, and proposes distributed compute over idle hardware as a potential solution to spread water and energy demand.
This blog post reviews recent scientific papers warning that rocket launches and satellite megaconstellations are depleting the ozone layer and polluting the upper atmosphere with metals, with implications for global warming.
Advocacy for dark sky lighting to reduce light pollution, improve safety, health, and protect wildlife.
NVIDIA highlights a statistic from the Manhattan Institute showing that data centers account for only 0.2% of daily U.S. water usage, a figure that has declined in recent years due to new technologies.
The article explores the 3-30-300 rule for urban tree coverage—three trees in view, 30% canopy coverage, and within 300m of a park—and discusses its adoption and impact on mental and physical health.
The Department of Justice sided with xAI in a lawsuit over unpermitted gas turbines, arguing that halting their use would harm national security and AI innovation supporting military operations.
Amazon reported that its global data centers consumed 2.5 billion gallons of water in 2025, a 2% drop from 2024, amid growing concerns over water and energy use for AI infrastructure. The company claims higher efficiency than some rivals like Microsoft, Google, and Meta.
Communities near xAI's data centers in Memphis are protesting pollution from unpermitted natural gas turbines, while SpaceX prepares for a massive IPO that will fund more AI infrastructure. Local officials warn of health risks, especially in a historically Black neighborhood with high asthma rates.
AI agents often fail due to messy environments rather than bad models; improving environment stability makes simple agents perform well.
The article examines growing bipartisan public opposition to data centers due to environmental concerns, resource strain, and limited local job creation, leading to regulatory moratoriums and defensive moves by tech companies like Meta.
OpenEnv, a library for creating agentic execution environments to train open source agents with reinforcement learning, is becoming more open with a new governance committee including Meta-PyTorch, Hugging Face, Nvidia, and others, aiming to provide a protocol layer that works across models and harnesses.
New York State lawmakers passed a one-year moratorium on new large data centers to study their environmental and energy impacts; Governor Hochul has until December to sign or veto.
Kevin O'Leary agreed to reduce his planned 40,000-acre Project Stratos data center in Utah by roughly half, following pressure from residents, activists, and state officials. The downsized project will still cover approximately 20,000 acres, larger than Manhattan.
The rise of artificial intelligence is driving a data centre boom that may require 40% more energy than previously estimated, potentially increasing household energy bills, according to campaigners.
Data center operators are grappling with water scarcity issues, with tech companies like Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI pledging to reduce water consumption through alternative cooling methods and water replenishment initiatives.
Google outlines five water stewardship commitments for its data centers, including a goal to replenish more water than it uses by 2030, in response to growing public opposition to the environmental impact of AI infrastructure.
OpenAI announced that its data center project will bear its own energy infrastructure costs, use a water-saving closed-loop cooling system, is expected to be completed in 2027, create 2,500 construction jobs and 450 long-term positions, and bring in approximately $1 billion in tax revenue.
Environmental activist Erin Brockovich has launched a website mapping data centers across the US to increase transparency, after receiving nearly 4,000 community submissions about data center-related issues, including lack of transparency.