Environmental concerns amid rising data center demand in Philippines

Rising AI demand is fueling global data center growth, with significant implications for power and sustainability. In the Philippines, the government is pushing for more data centers to achieve digital transformation goals, but the country's hot climate poses challenges for cooling and energy use.

Data centers, facilities that store, process, and transmit data, are expected to expand further in coming years due to AI. A June United Nations report stated that emissions from four major tech firms—Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta—rose 150% from 2020 to 2023 as AI operations grew, requiring more data centers.

The International Energy Agency's April 2025 report projected that global electricity demand from data centers will more than double by 2030, with AI as the primary driver. In the United States, new data centers are already disrupting water supplies and raising electricity costs, prompting protests from over 200 environmental groups and a reform of the 1969 National Environmental Policy Act to speed up permitting at the cost of thorough environmental reviews.

In the Philippines, there are currently 35 data centers, per datacentermap.com, and Department of Information and Communications Technology Secretary Henry Aguda aims for 1.5 gigawatts of output by 2028, up from 200 megawatts. Neighboring Singapore, with 1.4 gigawatts, faces similar climate challenges, as noted by PS Lee of the Sustainable Tropical Data Center Testbed: “In thermal terms, Singapore is almost ‘permanent peak summer’ for a data center…. Cooling is both technically harder and structurally more energy-intensive here.”

The Philippines, with average annual temperatures above 27°C in some regions—exceeding the optimal 18-27°C range—is among 21 countries facing this issue, according to a November 2025 Rest of World report. For sustainability, policies like UN guidelines and the EU's 2024 Energy Efficiency Directive, which mandates power usage reporting, are essential. ESG-compliant designs and renewable energy integration are key for investments, while monitoring community impacts on electricity and water.

Liittyvät artikkelit

Nuevo León Governor Samuel García at a press conference announcing a data center investment, with Nvidia denial overlaid, in a realistic news setting.
AI:n luoma kuva

Nvidia denies $1 billion investment in Nuevo León data center

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

Nuevo León Governor Samuel García announced a $1 billion investment for a green AI data center, initially attributing it to Nvidia. The company denied any direct financial commitment, stating its support is limited to technological cooperation and talent training. García later clarified the investment comes from AI-GDC and Cipre Holding, using Nvidia technology.

A new analysis warns that surging energy demands from data centers will significantly boost US power plant emissions over the next decade. However, shifting to renewables could reduce these emissions while stabilizing electricity prices. Simple policy measures might help address both environmental and economic concerns.

Raportoinut AI

Tech leaders like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos propose launching data centres into orbit to power AI's massive computing needs, but experts highlight formidable hurdles. From vast solar panels and cooling issues to radiation risks, building such facilities in space remains far off. Projects like Google's 2027 prototypes show early interest, yet production-scale viability is distant.

A 2020 storm shut down Iowa's only nuclear power plant prematurely. Google now aims to reopen it to supply energy for nearby data centers. Concerns arise over extreme weather risks in tornado-prone areas.

Raportoinut AI

In an opinion piece, Nathan Lord argues that America cannot lead in artificial intelligence without securing reliable energy sources, particularly natural gas. He highlights China's superior electricity generation and urges building data centers near fuel supplies in regions like the Shale Crescent. Without such measures, the US risks falling behind in the global AI competition.

China's total electricity consumption reached a record 10.4 trillion kilowatt-hours in 2025, driven by AI services and electric vehicle charging, widening the energy gap with the US and other major economies. The National Energy Administration announced this on Saturday, marking the first time annual usage exceeded 10 trillion kWh in China's history. Growth was primarily fueled by the tertiary sector and residential demand.

Raportoinut AI

Japan's economy ministry will provide financial support to domestic companies for processing vast amounts of data for machine learning. The focus is on manufacturing sector data to enhance the performance of domestically developed AI, strengthening product competitiveness and productivity. The ministry plans to invest ¥1 trillion over five years starting from fiscal 2026.

 

 

 

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