Forget about nuclear reactors, Google may have found a sneaky way to get all the electricity it needs for its data…

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  • Google shifts data center demand into distributed household energy systems
  • Voltus aggregates small household devices into coordinated grid support networks
  • Smart thermostats and batteries now contribute to national power stability

Every new data center Google builds consumes electricity on the scale of a small city, as the company continues to expand its AI and cloud computing capacity.

Nuclear reactors can take around 15 years to permit and construct, often costing billions of dollars, while natural gas plants face regulatory uncertainty and volatile fuel prices.

To address this growing power issue, Google has signed a three-year agreement with Voltus to access distributed electricity capacity rather than building new power plants directly.

Household devices become a distributed power network

Instead of chasing expensive nuclear or gas projects, the company will pay thousands of ordinary households for tiny slices of their electricity.

Each home contributes a negligible amount through devices like smart thermostats...

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