The AI energy bottleneck, with Tim Fist

The AI energy bottleneck, with Tim Fist

In this episode, Patrick McKenzie (@patio11) is joined by Tim Fist, Director of Emerging Technologies at the Institute for Progress, to discuss how energy constraints could bottleneck AI development. They explore how AI training clusters will soon require gigawatts of power—equivalent to multiple nuclear plants—with projections showing a single cluster needing 5 gigawatts by 2030. Tim explains why behind-the-meter generation and geothermal energy offer promising solutions while regulatory hurdles like NEPA and transmission permitting create "litigation doom loops" that threaten America's competitiveness. The conversation covers the global race for compute infrastructure, with China and the UAE making aggressive investments while the US struggles with permitting delays, highlighting how energy policy will determine which nations lead the AI revolution.

Full transcript available here: www.complexsystemspodcast.com/the-ai-energy-bottleneck-with-tim-fist/

Sponsor: Vanta

Vanta automates security compliance and builds trust, helping companies streamline ISO, SOC 2, and AI framework certifications. Learn more at https://vanta.com/complex

Recommended in this episode:


Timestamps:

(00:00) Intro

(00:40) Energy bottlenecks in AI development

(02:56) Technical and policy solutions for energy needs

(05:18) Challenges in transmission infrastructure

(12:14) Behind the meter generation explained

(17:50) Solar and storage: The future of energy

(18:47) Sponsor: Vanta

(20:05) Solar and storage: The future of energy (part 2)

(29:07) Power purchase agreements and financing

(33:17) Financing geothermal wells

(33:53) The promise of geothermal energy

(35:25) Challenges in geothermal adoption

(36:59) Industrial applications of geothermal heat

(45:01) Geothermal energy and national security

(49:27) Global investments in AI and energy infrastructure

(56:29) Policy and technical expertise in AI

(01:00:54) The role of government in technological advancements

(01:05:07) Wrap


Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(94)

Forty ways to pay for coffee in Japan

Forty ways to pay for coffee in Japan

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his 2021 essay "Payments in Japan," tracing how Japanese consumers navigate a landscape with dozens of competing payment methods at once: credit cards, electronic mone...

25 Jun 35min

The factory behind your home loan

The factory behind your home loan

Patrick McKenzie reads from his 2022 Bits About Money essay on mortgages, making the case that a mortgage is best understood as a manufactured product, not a simple loan between a bank and a customer....

18 Jun 26min

How brokerage transfers actually work

How brokerage transfers actually work

Patrick McKenzie reads from his 2024 Bits About Money essay on ACATS, the Automated Customer Account Transfer Service that governs how Americans move investment accounts between brokerages, then updat...

4 Jun 43min

Wrong numbers and why they survive, with Aaron Brown

Wrong numbers and why they survive, with Aaron Brown

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) is joined by Aaron Brown, author of Wrong Number, to examine why institutions that produce bad statistics face so few consequences for doing so. They trace the pattern from ...

14 Mai 55min

Defendant, Censor, Politico, Spy

Defendant, Censor, Politico, Spy

The improbable but true story of how non-profits operating a private intelligence agency to combat terrorism decided to interfere with campaign infrastructure in a U.S. election.This piece includes or...

8 Mai 1h 5min

How the SPLC became financial infrastructure

How the SPLC became financial infrastructure

Patrick McKenzie reads from his latest Bits About Money essay, walking through why bank fraud charges are a prosecutor's favorite tool, how the Bank Secrecy Act's surveillance regime is designed to fo...

1 Mai 51min

The honey badger of payments

The honey badger of payments

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his classic Bits about Money essay on how checks shaped the entire American payments infrastructure, from the origins of ACH to why a standard US bank account is, tech...

23 Apr 29min

Cash received is not revenue earned

Cash received is not revenue earned

Patrick McKenzie (patio11) reads his classic Bits about Money essay explaining why revenue recognition in software is more complicated than most engineers, founders, and financial reporters think. The...

16 Apr 33min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
e24-podden
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
rss-skravla-gar
rss-pa-konto
utbytte
finansredaksjonen
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
pengepodden-2
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
liberal-halvtime
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
pengesnakk
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
lederpodden
okonomiamatorene
rss-politisk-preik