Library

  • Request for Information Response to the Department of Energy: FASST Initiative

    Digital Climate Alliance, November 2024

    The Digital Climate Alliance (DCA) emphasizes the importance of integrating sustainability into their response on the Department of Energy's Request for Information on the Frontiers in AI for Science, Security, and Technology (FASST) initiative.

    The recommendations focus on designing energy-efficient AI infrastructure, advancing liquid cooling technologies to reduce environmental impact, and leveraging public-private partnerships to enhance innovation. The response highlights the transformative potential of AI in addressing societal challenges such as clean energy optimization, climate resilience, and infrastructure modernization while ensuring the U.S. maintains leadership in AI and high-performance computing.

  • Digital Infrastructure Industries Respond to Request for Comment on Bolstering Data Center Growth, Resilience, and Security

    Digital Climate Alliance, November 2024

    Responding to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration's “Bolstering Data Center Growth, Resilience, and Security” request for comment, representatives of the digital infrastructure ecosystem emphasize the need for modernized digital and electrical infrastructure to support the growing demands of artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) in the United States.

    The response outlines the challenges, opportunities, and policy recommendations needed to enhance the resilience and scalability of the U.S. digital infrastructure ecosystem.

  • Letter to Senate AI Working Group in Response to Senate Roadmap for AI Policy

    Digital Climate Alliance, July 2024

    The Digital Climate Alliance sent a letter to Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Sens. Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Mike Rounds (R-SD), and Todd Young (R-IN) commending the Senate AI Working Group on its bipartisan leadership in the recently published “Roadmap for Artificial Intelligence Policy in the U.S. Senate.”

    The letter, which is supported by The Business Council for Sustainable Energy, the Liquid Cooling Coalition, and the National Electrical Manufacturers Association, includes five policy recommendations for Congress to consider to modernize both the country’s digital and electric infrastructure to efficiently power an AI-enabled future.

  • Promise and Peril: Sustainability & the Rise of Artificial Intelligence

    Digital Climate Alliance, June 2024

    Artificial intelligence (AI) could have profound beneficial impacts in a range of areas, including efforts to address climate change and other sustainability issues.

    At the same time, the growth of AI — and the infrastructure needed to support it — will create additional sustainability challenges.

    This paper explores the promise of AI in advancing climate and sustainability solutions across the economy (i.e., its “handprint”), the potential peril of its environmental impacts (i.e., its “footprint”), and offers strategic policy recommendations to maximize AI’s sustainability benefits while mitigating its environmental footprint.

  • Sustainable Data Centers White Paper: Powering the Digital Revolution

    Digital Climate Alliance, March 2023

    Data centers are an integral part of modern-day society as they store and process massive amounts of data, from personal information to business data, and everything in between.

    However, data centers also consume an enormous amount of energy and have a significant impact on the environment. With the growing demand for data storage and processing, it is critical to address the need for sustainable data centers that can reduce their environmental impact while still meeting the growing demand for data.

    This paper aims to explore the importance of sustainable data centers, their impact on the environment, and potential solutions to reduce their carbon footprint.

  • Request for Information Response to the Environmental Protection Agency: Greenhouse Gas Corporate Reporting Requirements

    Digital Climate Alliance, January 2023

    This Request for Information response highlights the growing market demand for carbon transparency, the importance of standardized environmental data across the federal government, and the Data Harmonization Principles that the DCA developed last year.

  • Inflation Reduction Act Implementation Letter to the Department of Energy

    Digital Climate Alliance, November 2022

    The Digital Climate Alliance sent a letter to Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Jennifer M. Granholm urging the Department to leverage and utilize digital technologies as they implement the Inflation Reduction Act. Specifically, the letter encourages the DOE to utilize digital technologies to assist with the development of new electric distribution facilities, which will improve the reliability, flexibility, resilience, and efficiency of the grid and highlights the role of grid virtualization.

  • Inflation Reduction Act Implementation Letter to the General Services Administration

    Digital Climate Alliance, November 2022

    The Digital Climate Alliance sent a letter to General Services Administration (GSA) Administrator Robin Carnahan in support of the following provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act: 1) the Federal Buildings Fund provision directing the GSA to support “emerging and sustainable technologies, and related environmental programs” and 2) the provision directing the GSA to advance the utilization of products “that have substantially lower levels of embodied greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.”

  • Inflation Reduction Act Implementation Letter to the Environmental Protection Agency

    Digital Climate Alliance, November 2022

    The Digital Climate Alliance sent a letter to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Michael S. Regan in support of the following provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act: 1) the greenhouse gas (GHG) corporate reporting provision directing the EPA to support “enhanced standardization and transparency of corporate climate action commitments and plans to reduce GHG emissions" and 2) the provision directing the EPA to develop standards to identify and label materials and products with substantially lower levels of GHG emissions.

  • Methane Quantification: Toward Differentiated Gas White Paper

    CO2EFFICIENT, March 2022

    An assessment reviewing leading and emerging technologies that are being deployed for methane measurement and monitoring. With enhanced transparency of methane emissions across the supply chain, natural gas suppliers can begin to differentiate their products based on their environmental impacts.

  • Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Implementation Letter to the Department of Energy

    Digital Climate Alliance, January 2022

    The Digital Climate Alliance transmitted a letter to Department of Energy Secretary Jennifer M. Granholm in support of the following provisions in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA): 1) the enhanced data collection provisions directing the Energy Information Administration (EIA) to develop a publicly available dashboard and harmonize their data with EPA and other Federal agencies, and 2) the “Digital Climate Solutions” report.

  • Congressional Letter to Senate Environment and Public Works Committee

    Digital Climate Alliance and Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, August 2021

    Building off the Alliance’s recent work seeking to bring increased transparency and accountability around businesses voluntary emission reduction commitments, C2ES and the Digital Climate Alliance transmitted a letter to the Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW) Committee requesting, as part of their reconciliation recommendations, that they provide funding to the EPA’s Climate Protection Partnership Division to establish a “Corporate Climate Action Platform” that would enable large cap public and private companies to measure, report, and verify their progress towards these commitments

  • The Future of the United States Policy is Digital White Paper: How Digital Tools and Platforms can Revolutionize U.S. Climate Policy

    Digital Climate Alliance, July 2021

    As more and more companies are leveraging digital tools and platforms to reduce climate impacts, improve energy and water efficiency and resiliency, and promote further innovation across our nation’s critical infrastructure, there needs to be a concerted voice coordinating these efforts and advocating for the increased use of digital technologies as solutions to addressing the climate crisis.

  • Congressional Letter to Senate Environment and Public Works and House Transportation and Infrastructure Committees

    Digital Climate Alliance, March 2021

    The Digital Climate Alliance transmitted a letter encouraging Congress to develop “build back better” legislation that promotes economic recovery through infrastructure investment, including leveraging existing data systems and digital tools used in the private sector to design, operate, and maintain buildings and infrastructure that reduce carbon emissions and waste.

  • The Role of Digitalization in Driving Demand for Industrial Decarbonization

    Energy Consumer Market Alignment Project, March 2020

    Although technologies to help reduce industrial emissions are beginning to mature, there remains no clear and consistent way for the market to differentiate and value low-carbon industrial products in relation to higher polluting alternatives. By leveraging digitalization and advanced digital technologies like AI and blockchain, industrial companies can securely collect, store, and share real-time environmental data—and in turn, give consumers, investors, and governments a more complete, timely, credible, and trustworthy assessment of the climate impact of a particular product, facility, or company.

  • Environmental Sustainability of Data Centres Issue Brief: A Need for a Multi-impact and Life Cycle Approach

    Copenhagen Centre on Energy Efficiency, February 2020

    The focus on reducing climate change related impacts arising from data centers’ operations can overlook relevant environmental impacts from other life cycle stages, including raw material ex-traction, equipment manufacturing, data center construction, end of life of equipment and data center buildings. This issue brief uses examples to showcase the substantial environmental impacts of data centres stemming from other life cycle stages than their operations and calls for the use of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) to assess and address such impacts

  • The Smart Substation: Substation & Edge-of-the-Grid Automation

    Intel and Capgemini, 2020

    The need for an open, smarter grid starts with substation modernization.

    Increased use of distributed energy resources (DERs), electric vehicles (EVs), and intelligent automation applications require a significant change in the way today’s power grid is designed, built, and operated. To maintain a stable, efficient and sustainable energy ecosystem, utilities must transform the grid from a rigid, one way journey to a two-way exchange of power leveraging the ability to exchange data and using communication in a secured way

  • Digital Disruptions for Sustainability Agenda: Research, Innovation, Action

    Sustainability in the Digital Age, 2020

    Two powerful forces are shaping human destiny: global climate change and the digital revolution. Both are human creations that pose systemic risks to society. The changing climate is driving systemic shifts that threaten to destabilize the health and well being of humankind. Big data, digital platforms, and artificial intelligence are rapidly transforming society in ways that pose systemic risks to the global social fabric. But fortunately, the digital age also presents systemic opportunities for driving the large-scale societal transformations needed to build a climate-safe and equitable world.

  • The Enablement Effect Report: The Impact of Mobile Communications Technologies on Carbon Emission Reductions

    GSMA and Carbon Trust, December 2019

    By increasing connectivity, improving efficiency and impacting behavior change, mobile network enabled technologies are helping avoid emissions. In 2018, the enabling impact of mobile communication technologies globally was estimated to be around 2,135 million tonnes of CO2e – similar to the total GHG emissions emitted by Russia in 2017.2 The total annual emissions of the mobile sector are approximately 220 MtCO2e,3 which is about 0.4% of total global emissions. Compared to the global carbon footprint of mobile networks themselves, the level of avoided emissions enabled by mobile communications technologies is 10 times greater – a tenfold positive impact.

  • Turning Digital Technology Innovation into Climate Action Report

    ITU, 2019

    The evidence and case studies presented in this report cover the full range of measures that are being deployed to better understand the Earth’s system, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and build resilience to the climate crisis – from using space sensing observation to track deforestation to developing smart grids to accelerate the energy transition to strengthening early warnings systems against the rising number of extreme weather events.

  • Navigating Blockchain and Climate Action Report: An Overview

    Climate Ledger Initiative, December 2018

    Blockchain technology provides a key to solving some of the critical issues that hinder effective scaling of climate action. The main benefits of blockchain technology are rooted in three main characteristics:

    Data records on a blockchain are immutable through a permanent ledger for increased transparency.

    Blockchain technology brings trust to peer-to-peer transactions.

    Smart contracts that can automatically execute the terms specified in a contract increase efficiency and reduce transaction costs.