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Microsoft (MSFT.O) is considering delaying or abandoning its 2030 goal of matching its entire hourly electricity use with renewable ​energy purchases, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday, ‌citing people familiar with the matter.

The expensive and energy-intensive push for data centers is reshaping the feasibility of Microsoft's climate ​commitments that were made before the AI ​era and rank among the industry's most ambitious ⁠targets, the report said.

The discussions were ongoing and no ​final decision has been made, Bloomberg News added.

Microsoft did ​not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Like rivals Amazon (AMZN.O) and Alphabet (GOOGL.O), the Windows maker is spending hundreds of billions ​of dollars to build out artificial intelligence infrastructure ​needed to power services such as its Copilot assistant and Azure ‌cloud ⁠service.

Some of the new data centers tech companies are developing are expected to have multiple gigawatts of capacity. A single gigawatt is enough to roughly power ​750,000 U.S. homes.

The ​rush to ⁠power those data centers has sparked a flurry of deals, including those for ​nuclear energy. It has also boosted demand for natural ​gas, ⁠which some industry executives have said is faster and easier to deploy than renewables.

Microsoft in 2024 agreed a power ⁠deal ​with Constellation Energy (CEG.O) to help ​resurrect a unit of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania.


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