The latest sustainability reports from both companies reveal a difficult reality: the infrastructure demands of generative AI are outpacing their transition to green energy. While both corporations have spent years securing renewable power for their existing operations, the sheer scale of modern data centers has forced a shift toward fossil fuels. Google has already begun investing in natural gas power plants to ensure the reliable electricity flow necessary to keep pace with AI processing requirements.
Most of the rising pollution is categorized as Scope 3 emissions, which encompass the supply chain, construction, and hardware production. Building massive data centers requires vast amounts of steel and cement, industries that remain heavily reliant on carbon-intensive processes. Furthermore, the global semiconductor industry, which supplies the GPUs and memory chips central to AI development, relies on manufacturing hubs in Asia where electrical grids are still dominated by coal and gas. Beyond energy, the chemical processes used in chip fabrication often release potent greenhouse gases that exacerbate the total warming impact.
To reconcile these rising figures with their sustainability targets, Amazon and Google face a narrowing path. Amazon, which added over 1.2 gigawatts of data center capacity in the final quarter of 2025 alone, is currently prioritizing growth over immediate emission reductions. Reversing this trend will likely require massive investments in carbon removal credits and a fundamental overhaul of their supply chains, moving away from high-carbon materials and energy-heavy manufacturing hubs.
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