Do you want to be powered-by renewables? The answer is no.

Asim Hussain

Microsoft has committed to a 100% supply of renewable energy by 2025. Does a 100% supply of renewable energy mean that the electricity’s carbon intensity doesn’t matter? Does that make computing guilt-free?

This post will answer that question. By answering this question, you will understand the part software engineers play in the epic transition of the entire world to low carbon electricity.

As a sustainable software engineer, my primary goal is to build carbon-efficient applications. A carbon-efficient application is one that extracts the maximum value for each gram of carbon it is responsible for emitting into the atmosphere.

Sustainable Software Engineering is an emerging discipline at the intersection of climate science, software, hardware, energy markets, and data center design.

There are 8 principles to sustainable software engineering, I encourage you to read them all on the website principles.green. To summarise the first 3 principles:

  1. Reducing carbon emissions is the goal.
  2. Electricity is a proxy for carbon because most electricity is still created through the burning of fossil fuels.
  3. The electricity generated through the burning of fossil fuels is said to have a high carbon intensity. The electricity created through renewable or low-carbon means has a low carbon intensity. The carbon intensity unit of measurement is gCO2eq/kWh or grams of carbon per kilowatt-hour.

Powered-by vs. matched-by renewables

The question isn’t why is Microsoft pushing for 100% supply of renewable energy by 2025, it’s how? To answer this question, we need to cut a clear distinction between being powered-by renewables and being matched-by renewables.

Powered-by means you are directly powered by a renewables plant, say a hydro dam. The electrons flowing into your device only come from that renewable source.

Another way to describe this is being “off-grid”. For most people, we live on an interconnected grid, with many producers pumping electricity in and many consumers taking electricity out. Being part of the grid means you are part of this giant interconnected machine. It also means the electrons coming into your device are a mixture of all the electrons going into the grid. Suppose the grid only has 5% of wind supply at the moment. You are getting 5% of wind-generated electrons and 95% of fossil fuel generated electrons.

A grid with fossil fuel plants and wind/solar plants pumping electricity in and consumers sucking electricity out, that electricity being sucked out is a mix of everything going in

There are many advantages to be on the grid. You don’t need to build things near power stations if you suddenly need a lot of energy in a short period, it’s there. There are also disadvantages to being on the grid, some grids are running on very old antiquated systems and have frequent outages. The solution isn’t to go off-grid, it’s to fix the grid.

If what we are doing isn’t a solution for everyone, if it isn’t a stepping stone to a future where everyone has access to low carbon energy, then it’s not a solution at all.

Going off-grid, powering a data center directly by renewable energy might make you happy and somewhat guilt-free. But if you can’t find a path from that to a future where everyone is living off renewable energy, then it’s not a climate solution.

Being matched-by renewables is different. It means staying on the grid and helping transition it to a grid powered mainly by renewables, for everyone.

Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs)

In our 2030 carbon-negative announcement Microsoft clearly defined what we meant by 100% supply of renewable energy.

“By 2025, we will shift to 100 percent supply of renewable energy, meaning that we will have power purchase agreements for green energy contracted for 100 percent of carbon-emitting electricity consumed by all our data centers, buildings, and campuses.”

To be clear, Microsoft was not starting at 0. We had already reached 60% renewables sourcing for our data centers by 2020. The 2025 target broadened the scope of our commitments from just data centers to everything, our campuses, our buildings, and even our busses. We had achieved our current goals and planned to meet our new goals, not by being powered-by renewables but matched-by.

We are buying something called a PPA, a power purchase agreement with a renewables plant. If we estimate for a particular data center, we need 500MWh of electricity per year; we would sign a PPA to purchase 500MWh per year from a renewables plant. Our data center and the renewables plant are connected to the grid. Being matched-by renewables means staying on the grid.

PPAs are typically very long-term contracts. With one of these agreements in hand, a plan for a renewables plant can find financing to build itself since it already has a buyer for its electricity for many years. PPAs drive the creation of renewable power plants.

At Microsoft, we have a policy of additionality. We will only purchase a PPA if it adds renewable energy to the grid. If a PPA is from an existing renewables plant, we won’t buy it.

We don’t buy PPAs to make sure the electrons entering our data centers only come from renewable plants. We buy PPAs to increase the amount of renewable energy available to everyone. It’s a solution that gets us towards a future where everyone has access to 100% renewable energy.

What’s in my electricity?

As a software engineer, what this means is that even if you are running on a data center that is 100% matched-by renewables, you are still probably consuming electricity created by the burning of fossil fuels.

Don’t take this as a sad fact; this is empowering.

This means that the data center you are running your software on, has driven the creation of new renewable plants for the benefit of everyone, not just the data center provider.

This also means that actions you take as software engineers can reduce the carbon emissions of your application. Making your application more energy-efficient, reduces its carbon emissions. Delaying workloads to time when the carbon intensity is less, reduces its carbon emissions. Moving workloads to a region where the carbon intensity is less reduces its carbon emissions.

By understanding electricity, you open the door to a world of possibilities for reducing carbon emissions.

These ideas are discussed in more depth in the 2nd principle of sustainable software engineering build applications that are energy-efficient, and the 3rd principle consume electricity with the lowest carbon intensity.

So the answer to the question “Does a 100% supply of renewable energy make computing guilt-free?”, is always no. If you are being powered-by renewables then you are off-grid which doesn’t help the world transition to a renewable-powered future. If you are matched-by renewables then the electricity powering your computer comes from fossil fuel sources, however, it also means the actions you take as a software engineer can help reduce the consumption of that fossil fuel energy and help transition everyone to a renewable future.

2 comments

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  • Mark Iannucci 0

    Moving workloads to a region where the carbon intensity is less reduces its carbon emissions.

    I am responsible for a workload which runs on azure. It is currently running in South Central US. I can easily move it to North Central US with zero impact to my users. Is there a way for me to know which region has a lower carbon intensity? I’d happily move it if I knew of a way to know.

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