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welcome and thank you for joining us
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today I'm VJ vtis waren I'm the global
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energy and climate Innovation editor of
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The Economist and I'm here at the global
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conference on energy and AI live
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convened by the International Energy
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agency in Paris I'm conducting a series
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of interviews with leaders from industry
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government Civil Society about what AI
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will have in store for the global
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economy in the years
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ahead I'm here now with Kate Brent Chief
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sustainability Officer of Google welcome
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Kate thank you great to see you great to
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see you and what a a a timely event
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indeed absolutely uh let's jump right
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into it since our audience is a
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sophisticated one people have followed
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uh the morning's proceedings with the
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plenaries and uh the big picture we all
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know AI for energy energy for AI this is
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one of the hot topics of the last 12
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months and of course at Google you're
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right in the thi of it um people will
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know that uh your company is uh a great
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beneficiary of Ai and a promoter of AI
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but we have seen also the impacts on
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energy and your own emissions your
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carbon intensity as well as your energy
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consumption y uh has increased uh can
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you tell us how are you thinking about
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this how do you deal with this difficult
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challenge yeah absolutely so I would
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just start by saying we've set very
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ambitious goals for how we want to
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responsibly operate our business so our
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goal is to be Net Zero across our
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operations and value Chain by 2030 and
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also to power all of our offices and
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data centers with 24x7 carbon free
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energy so very ambitious goals
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especially in light of what you've noted
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that we are seeing AI really at this
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inflection point I think one thing that
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was missed a little bit in the coverage
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of you know when we and many others put
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out our annual reports and there was a
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lot of discourse around what was going
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on with the footprint was we disclosed a
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new metric around the percentage
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increase of data center electricity and
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what that showed was a 17% increase
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which was actually in line with previous
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years so I think there was a narrative
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that wanted to be told when it was
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actually a little bit Le more nuanced
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and that you're seeing more of the
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historical Trends holding around overall
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data center expansion and also emissions
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in the supply chain so I just think
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important to note to your point of
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having a more kind of in-depth
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conversation about this and also very
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important that we need to responsibly
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manage that footprint going forward so
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we're really focused on that in three
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ways it's looking at first our
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infrastructure that's all the way down
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to the chip making our chips as
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efficient as possible our sixth
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generation TPU which is our AI chip is
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67% more efficient than the pr previous
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generation also overall data centers
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making them much more energy efficient
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we're getting 4X the compute out of the
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same amount of electricity compared to
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five years ago then it's how you're
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training the models and we've been
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sharing best practices for how you can
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really much more efficiently train
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models reducing emissions up to 1,000x
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energy 100x and then lastly there is the
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carbon free energy that it's very
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important to us to get a lot of clean
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firm power onto grids and I know we'll
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talk about that more in this
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conversation let just unpack that a
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little bit because you've kind of
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sketched out your your road map um uh
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starting with uh the uh what what seems
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to be a great race right that there's a
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race between uh increasing uh
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applications for AI we're increasingly
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finding New Uses and uh that's certainly
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broadly speaking good for the world uh
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in Innovation and Science and improving
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efficiency across sectors uh but at the
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same time obviously the energy
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consumption needs themselves can be made
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more efficient on the chip uh as well as
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in the data center design you've
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introduced things like a more efficent
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data center design I think at least in
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affiliate of yours sidewalk
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infrastructure Partners I think has done
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so but can you talk what is the
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potential of that great raise because
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typically what we find with in energy is
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the jeans effect right if you make
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things more efficient or cheaper people
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tend to use more of energy as happened
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with coal a few hundred years ago uh
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could this happen that our our uses that
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we find for AI uh outstrip the
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efficiency gains that you're able to
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come up with yeah so I think a few
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things I would say about that the data
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center sector as a whole has a very
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long-standing track record of driving
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really deep efficiency and of course why
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is that well yes we all very much care
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about environmental sustainability but
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also for cost reasons and so there's a
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piece of research that John Kumi did
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many years ago that looked at that
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period of time between 2010 and 2018
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when there was a big data center boom
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electricity consumption for data centers
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during that time only increased 6% while
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compute capacity increased by 550x so
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this is a sector that knows how to
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operate really efficiency and
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efficiently and has a major business in
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incentive to do so so I'm not
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necessarily saying that Trend we will
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see again but there's a lot of muscle
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memory and a lot of understanding how to
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keep driving that efficiency for
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business reasons and then also I think
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you're pointing to you know the net
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benefit what are all the solutions that
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are going to be possible that AI is
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going to enable to modernize electricity
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systems which is a lot of what we've
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been talking about here at the Ia and
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that's what we're seeing huge potential
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for whether that's you know using AI to
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better understand the solar potential of
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rooftops to enable developers to deploy
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more quickly uh or working with grid
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operators to help them better model
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their grids and understand what it would
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look like to pull off a coal plant how
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could they deploy more wind energy uh
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and then also even understanding extreme
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weather events more effectively which we
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know impact clean energy Supply being
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able to predict weather much more
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effectively um or even being able to
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predict flooding so I think we're seeing
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um both a sector that really understands
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how to drive towards deep efficiency and
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so many use cases that will be essential
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to driving innovation in the energy
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sector let's pick up on the piece about
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the actual energy that's used um as you
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said you've made some very strong
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commitments as a company towards uh
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decarbonization uh quite aggressive
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goals that are now obviously being
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challenged by this booming Market um you
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and uh other technology companies
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pioneered uh the use of power purchase
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agreements In America which really
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helped cement the rise of renewable
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energy in America at scale is that
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sufficient is that tool fit for purpose
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or I'm seeing you put forward new kinds
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of commercial agreements uh can you tell
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us just very briefly what what
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differently now needs to happen given
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that the scale of energy now we're
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talking
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hyperscaling uh data centers the size of
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nuclear power plants worth of energy
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what do you need to do differently yeah
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so of course yes we've been um executing
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on ppas for renewable energy since 2010
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we have a portfolio of 14 gws so we are
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very comfortable with that approach and
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we need new Tools in our toolbox so one
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thing that we did uh earlier this year
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was We partnered with Envy energy who's
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the utility in Nevada on a new model
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called a clean transition tariff this
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enables us to do direct planning with
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the utility so they can better
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understand what our load profile or any
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large energy users load profile will
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look like do that planning with us
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understand the kind of clean firm
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capacity we're going to need and not put
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that burden on the rate payers so tools
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like that are going to be really
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critical also we want to see more clean
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firm power deployed and so we've been
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utilizing the advanced Market commitment
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model and we announced a pilot of an
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advanced Market commitment with both
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Microsoft and new cor also this year
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where we put out an RFI to the industry
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showing our demand for clean firm power
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and we're really excited to see that
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there's been a very strong response to
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that uh we're going to see more advanced
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nuclear we also uh signed agreements
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with chyos kyos is here with us today
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here today we'll be speaking with them a
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little bit later and you did a a deal
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for multiple reactors in advance so it's
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a form of advanced Market commitment
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yeah that's an order book model so this
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is something that the US Department of
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energy has suggested is really
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productive for the deployment of
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advanced nuclear and so we were able to
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use that model and say we have a demand
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for 500 megawatts in 2030 uh and Beyond
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and that's what chyos will be delivering
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to us through that partnership so we
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also see that as a really nice
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Innovative model as well now why does
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that make sense for you we all know you
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know when there's an NF1 the first
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nuclear power plant tends to be
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extremely expensive just look at the
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recent history of nuclear power the last
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few decades and this is a Innovative new
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technology small modular reactors uh the
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sixth one may be a lot cheaper one hopes
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uh how do you think about the Financial
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Risk to your company from taking on
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novel technology risk for the first
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couple of plants how do you justify it
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yeah we've been certainly very impressed
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with chyos and the approach they've been
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taking we've been looking at the sector
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for a long time and we really see them
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doing a lot of great Innovation that's
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driving a lot efficiency and really
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bringing cost down and also that ability
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to use the order book model where we're
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not just saying we're going to have one
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PPA for a single facility but actually
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to have that order book that also
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creates more efficiencies in economies
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of scale from a cost perspective and
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this is what we need this is why we need
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things like Advanced Market commitments
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for clean for power we need buyers to
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come forward who have an appetite to be
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early adopters but also where we can
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then get creative with the structures
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that we use so that it can be cost-
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effective for us as businesses too no
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another application of this you hinted
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at this with your comment about Nevada
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uh is geothermal there's a lot of
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innovation uh in this space and the Ia
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in fact this has an important report
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coming out next week on uh Advanced uh
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geothermal but um can you tell us about
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your relationship with fvo one of those
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Innovative companies uh that you've uh
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done a deal with what is it how are you
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structuring that yeah absolutely so yes
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fvo um has been a great partner of ours
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and uh our second agreement with them
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was actually off the back of the CTT the
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clean transition tariff um in Envy
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energy we're now being able to deploy
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more um Advanced geothermal through that
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model so we've really found fvo to be
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excellent Partners we are very bullish
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on Advanced geothermal we're excited
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about the ia's report we've also been
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doing work with project interpace around
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mapping Advanced geothermal capability
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in different parts of the world so we're
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very bullish on it it is indeed as
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you've said uh the decisive decade and
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so we'll see if we meet in 2030 or 2035
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how things change uh thank you so much
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for joining us and this conversation uh
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live from the ia's global conference on
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I uh Ai and energy of course uh will be
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able uh to be replayed at this website
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at this link up next I'll be speaking
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with uh ashis Kumar Dash who is
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Executive Vice President at infosis we
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hope you'll join us then thank
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[Music]
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you for