Stay Ahead, Stay ONMINE

The Emperor’s New Clothes: BP and Shell’s duck diplomacy

BP’s (LON:BP) undressing of its energy transition goals is the latest and most significant example of an oil supermajor reneging on its green investment pledges. It is easy to speculate that companies such as BP, and similarly Shell (LON:SHEL), have attempted to diversify into renewable energy too quickly. However, diversification in the energy transition could […]

BP’s (LON:BP) undressing of its energy transition goals is the latest and most significant example of an oil supermajor reneging on its green investment pledges.

It is easy to speculate that companies such as BP, and similarly Shell (LON:SHEL), have attempted to diversify into renewable energy too quickly. However, diversification in the energy transition could be the very thing that pulls the cart out of danger.

This week, BP’s chief executive Murray Auchincloss defended the company’s decision to jettison renewable energy pledges and increase oil and gas production.

In late February, he said the oil major had accelerated “too far, too fast” in the transition to renewable energy. “Our optimism for a fast transition was misplaced,” he said, after profits fell across its low-carbon and gas division, precipitating a sudden strategic about-face.

The company, which has been under pressure from analysts and shareholders to reduce its low-carbon investments and double down on its core business of oil and gas, plans to cut investment in low-carbon projects by $5 billion (£4bn), Auchincloss said.

© Image: Bloomberg
London’s Old Oil Stocks Diverge | BP underperforms Shell on worries about green transition, payouts.

“The challenge that faces BP and Equinor, and to varying degrees Shell and Equinor, is the marked underperformance of their shares relative to that of their US peers,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.

“Whether this is down to the relatively greater emphasis they have placed upon investment in renewables to facilitate a move away from hydrocarbons or simply down to their stock market domicile (given how US equities continue to dominate across the board) is hard to divine, but the truth may well lie somewhere between. There is a sense that shareholders are becoming restless.”

BP’s shares have shown a marked underperformance relative to global peers since former CEO Bernard Looney announced a major pivot away from hydrocarbons in August 2020.

While in the past five years, BP’s share price on the London Stock Exchange has risen by more than 50%, its shares have slumped 14% in the past year and now trade at 421.4 pence per share.

US rival Chevron’s (NYSE: CVX) share price has comparatively stayed flat at US$153.61 per share over the past year and surged 84% in five years.

BP’s former chief executive Looney had planned to cut the production of hydrocarbons by 40% and increase investment in wind power, solar, hydrogen and other areas of clean power.

In 2023, BP revised a plan to cut oil and gas production by 40% to 25% by the end of the decade, while (at that time) leaving the long-term net-zero target unchanged.

BP q3 © SYSTEM
Former BP chief executive Bernard Looney.

BP shares ‘lagged’

While Looney had already begun to scale back those commitments before he was ousted by the board in 2023, BP’s unravelling of its low-carbon targets took hold with the installation of Auchincloss that year, who began to scale back low-carbon investments after he was appointed interim chief executive.

The oil company was rocked last month when notorious activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management took a stake in the firm just a week before its capital markets day, after its shares had “lagged” American and European peers.

The activist investor took a nearly £3.8bn stake of almost 5% in the company, in an apparent effort to wrest control from the board.

Analysts predict that the activist could call for a management reshuffle or a sale of assets. Elliott is expected to agitate for change – for example, by calling for a strategic asset disposal or spin-off, or a break-up of the company or bid.

There is growing pressure on executives at traditional energy companies to address “the perception that renewables projects offer lower returns on investment”, says Mould.

© Supplied by Brandalism
Fake BP and Shell adverts appear across Aberdeen.

That pressure to appease shareholders may prove too great, as in Auchincloss’s case, his pay fell by one third from £7.7m in 2023 to £5.4m in 2024, with a drop in his bonus from more than £1.1m to £734,000.

According to analysts, BP paid out estimated dividends of £5.2bn in 2024, less than the total dividends issued by TotalEnergies of £7.7bn and Shell at £8.7bn – with ExxonMobil’s the highest estimated annual payout at £16.7bn.

“The dilemma is that oil firms have the cash flow and resources to invest in these projects and help to ease the transition, but it is not clear whether they can do so while maintaining the returns on capital and cash returns,” says Mould.

In recent commentary, he speculated that activist investor Elliott “wants BP to clarify its strategy on oil and gas production, renewable energy and the future direction of the group”.

Revealing BP’s Q4 results, Auchincloss said it had been “reshaping” its global portfolio, “sanctioning new major projects” and “focusing our low-carbon investment” with a cost reductions key to the changes.

The company has hinted at plans to potentially sell off its US onshore wind business and recently consolidated its offshore wind portfolio, forming a joint venture with Japanese firm Jera, in a bid to reduce capital investment.

© Supplied by Shell/BP
Picture shows; Shearwater platform, North Sea, and the Empire Wind project in the US. -. Supplied by Shell/BP Date; Unknown

No ‘automatic right’ to win

Auchincloss unveiled a net-zero “reset” of BP’s business in February, but kept in place the company’s 2050 net-zero emissions target.

Ashley Kelty, natural resources analyst at Panmure Liberum, said: “A fanfare of changes had been promised, but in all honesty it is an underwhelming reset for the company.

“There was the expected pivot away from lower margin renewables back to investment in core oil and gas. This will see increased investment of $10bn annually in fossil fuels, with spend on low margin renewables slashed by c$5bn annually to $1.5-2bn. However, this means that overall capex will fall from prior guidance of $14-18bn to $13-15bn.”

He said the “increased upstream activity is targeting growth in production” and “to get reserve replacement from current 50% to over 100% by 2027”.

“This is likely to be very challenging given the recent underinvestment in O&G and the long timelines to get discoveries into production,” said Kelty.

He suggested that activist investor Elliott will look to unseat Auchincloss and chairman Helge Lund for not taking the “radical” step of axing its renewables business entirely.

BP appears to have costed in its deliverables tightly, with little room to manoeuvre. As Kelty points out, overall spending is declining, and a fall in spending can indicate lower potential for future growth.

In December, the company scaled back its investment in offshore wind in a bid to reduce capex. As part of its strategic “reset”, it is also expected to sell a stake in solar power producer LightSource BP, after finalising a takeover of the renewables business just last year.

Europe’s biggest ever floating solar panel array, installed by Lightsource Renewable Energy, on London’s Queen Elizabeth II reservoir.

BP may find that it is hamstrung without investing in growth, while tightly pricing its costs. Kelty warns that BP has made “some pretty challenging assumptions on pricing” that leaves it with “no margin for error if commodity prices fall”.

While some analysts have called for a “radical shift” in abandoning renewables entirely to make the company more “attractive to investors”, without investing in growth the company risks becoming irrelevant in a changing world.

“BP is now recalibrating its strategy and more emphasis on ensuring it generates the best value from its oil and gas assets, given how the pace of transition toward renewables is taking time, owing to the challenges involved in connecting new energy sources to the old, existing grid,” says Mould.

“Whether this is enough to satisfy all shareholders is unlikely – some will be disappointed by the slower pace of progress, others will be frustrated by how BP continues to try and ride two horses at once. There are reports that Elliott continues to push for a total spin-off of the renewables operations.”

In October, BP issued a profit warning indicating that quarterly oil trading had slumped, but that electric vehicle charging was expected to be a growth area for the multinational business.

By January, BP had announced it would cut more than 5% of its global workforce in pursuit of “value”, just a day after UK energy secretary Ed Miliband said the UK government would consult on plans to stop issuing new oil and gas licences.

© Supplied by House of Lords
Ed Miliband and Chris Stark Picture shows; Rt Hon Ed Miliband MP, The Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero (Doncaster North, Labour) and Head of Mission Control for Clean Power 2030 Chris Stark. House of Lords, Westminster. Supplied by House of Lords Date; 21/01/2025

“The issue, thus far, has largely been one of share price performance relative to the other global majors and the American ones in particular – CVX, XOM and COP. There is a perception that BP tried to move too quickly away from hydrocarbons and thus had put itself at risk of failing to maximise the value of its existing assets,” says Mould.

“Additional, there are concerns that renewables require different skillsets (and bring a different customer base) relative to oil and gas exploration and production, with the result that operational risk is higher at a time when return on capital employed in renewables could be lower than that earned from hydrocarbon production.”

In a letter to employees explaining the headcount reduction, Auchincloss nevertheless highlighted a need for the business to accelerate in the energy transition.

“We are uniquely positioned to grow value through the energy transition. But that doesn’t give us an automatic right to win,” Auchincloss told employees.

Shell’s ‘ruthless’ outlook

Last year, Shell chief executive Wael Sawan promised a similarly “ruthless” focus on generating returns, retiring a goal of reducing net carbon intensity by 45% by 2035 and watering down its emissions-reduction target for oil to 15-20%.

On 30 January, Shell posted adjusted earnings of $3.66bn for the final quarter of the year, down from the $6bn of earnings that it posted in the third quarter.

Again, it was under pressure financially. Its annual earnings slumped to nearly £23.72bn in 2024, down from £28.25bn in 2023, while it reported a loss in its renewables and energy solutions business. Installed renewables capacity remained almost flat on the prior quarter at 7.4 GW.

Shell emissions © Bloomberg
Shell CEO Wael Sawan.

“Shell’s fourth quarter revenue fell from $78.7bn to $66.3bn,” says Hargreaves Lansdown’s head of equity research Derren Nathan.

“Underlying profit halved to $3.6bn, falling short of analyst expectations. The weak performance reflected lower margins in its trading businesses as well as the marketing division. Lower oil prices also played their part as well as non-cash write offs of exploration wells.”

Shell’s main focus “remains very much on oil and gas”, says Nathan, who warned that unpredictable oil prices will be a “crucial element” of the group’s fortunes, adding that Shell is “not a one-trick pony”.

“In distribution, Shell is particularly well placed to provide lower-carbon options to motorists,” Nathan said. “Its global network of 47,000 service stations is the largest of all the oil majors. By 2030, it’s hoping to nearly quadruple the size of its Electric Vehicle charging estate, to around 200,000 connection points.”

shell rapid charger

Ultimately, energy companies understand the value of transitioning their businesses to keep pace with market adaptation, as demonstrated by Auchincloss’s pithy comments.

In the coming decade, they will likely face the extinction of new oil and gas exploration licences and a phase-out of petrol cars, if the Labour government honours its pledges to do so.

But as they grasp onto new vines, they continue to cling tighter onto their existing holdings – putting them out of step with the wider policy climate. Whether this proves to be the right strategic decision, only time will tell.

The first article in the series examined whether oil supermajors are positioned to survive the energy transition.

Recommended for you

Shape
Shape
Stay Ahead

Explore More Insights

Stay ahead with more perspectives on cutting-edge power, infrastructure, energy,  bitcoin and AI solutions. Explore these articles to uncover strategies and insights shaping the future of industries.

Shape

Observability platforms gain AI capabilities

LogicMonitor also announced Oracle Infrastructure (OCI) Monitoring to expand its multi-cloud coverage, provide visibility across AWS, Azure, GCP, and OCI, and offer observability capabilities across several cloud platforms. The company also made its LM Uptime and Dynamic Service Insights capabilities generally available to help enterprise IT organizations find issues sooner

Read More »

Cisco strengthens integrated IT/OT network and security controls

Another significant move that will help IT/OT integration is the planned integration of the management console for Cisco’s Catalyst and Meraki networks. That combination will allow IT and OT teams to see the same dashboard for industrial OT and IT enterprise/campus networks. Cyber Vision will feeds into the dashboard along

Read More »

Oil Drops as Trump Says Low Prices Will End RUS-UKR War

Oil edged down in a choppy session after US President Donald Trump implied that he favored low prices over sanctions as a means of pressuring Russia to end its war in Ukraine.  West Texas Intermediate fell 0.7% to trade below $64 a barrel after swinging in a roughly $1 range as Trump reiterated a commitment to low oil prices, limiting investors’ conviction that global efforts to squeeze Russian flows will pan out. Washington has signaled that the US wouldn’t follow through with threats to penalize Moscow’s crude unless Europe also acts.  Futures slid further after Trump told reporters that “if we get oil down, the war ends,” a sign of his preferred strategy to halt the flow of petrodollars that fund Russia’s war effort. He also repeated his calls for countries to stop buying Russian oil.  The commodity also followed fluctuations in US Treasury yields, with the optimism over monetary loosening after Wednesday’s quarter-point reduction in US interest rates tempered by the Fed’s cautious tone.  After the Fed’s cut, “we are back focusing on sanctions and geopolitics versus weak fundamentals,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management.  Traders have honed in on Russian flows over recent weeks amid intensifying Ukrainian attacks on the country’s energy infrastructure and as the European Union unveils a fresh package of sanctions on Moscow. Two more Russian oil refineries were attacked on Thursday as Ukraine stepped up strikes, and further closures threaten to tighten global oil balances and dent the Kremlin’s war chest.  As a result of the repeated Ukrainian strikes, Russian refining runs have now dropped below 5 million barrels a day, the lowest since April 2022, according to estimates from JPMorgan Chase & Co.  In the US, meanwhile, inventories of distillates — a group of fuels that includes diesel — reached

Read More »

Octopus Energy Plans to Spin Off Technology Arm

Octopus Energy Group Ltd. plans to spin off Kraken Technologies Ltd., a software platform that helps utilities manage the transition to cleaner energy.  Kraken has been key to Octopus Energy’s growth into the UK’s largest electricity supplier, leapfrogging industry incumbents to serve more than 7 million customers in the country. The software allows it to balance out power flows to households as energy-transition technologies like electric vehicles, home batteries, solar panels and heat pumps become more widespread. The software platform is already being licensed to other energy providers such as Electricite de France SA, serving more than 70 million household and business accounts worldwide. Committed annual revenue has increased fourfold to $500 million in just three years and the spinoff will accelerate the expansion, Octopus said in a statement on Thursday. “Kraken is now a globally successful business in its own right,” Chief Executive Officer Amir Orad said in the statement. “Completing our journey to full independence is a strategic and inevitable next step.” Tim Wan has joined Kraken as its chief financial officer, the same role he previously held at US software firm Asana Inc., according to the statement. He was involved in Asana’s US listing in New York in 2020.  Kraken could be valued at as much as $14 billion, Sky News reported in July, citing a person familiar with the matter, who also said the spinoff could be part of plans for Octopus Energy to sell a stake in Kraken to external investors. The demerger and any stake sale could “bring transparency to the value of Kraken,” said Martin Young, founder of consulting firm Aquaicity Ltd. He said that could be a precursor to further sales in the future, and possibly an initial public offering. “Separation offers a cleaner structure and puts to bed the question: ‘Is

Read More »

Ukraine Hits 2 Russian Oil Refineries

Two Russian oil refineries were attacked on Thursday as Ukraine stepped up strikes on its enemy’s energy infrastructure. Gazprom’s Neftekhim Salavat petrochemical facility in the Bashkortostan region was set on fire after being hit by drones, local governor Radiy Khabirov said. The site is more than 1,300 kilometers (800 miles) from territory under Ukraine’s control, making it one of Kyiv’s deepest strikes inside Russian territory. Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces also claimed an attack on Lukoil PJSC’s major Volgograd refinery in the Volga region. As a result of the attack, the facility, which has a capacity of around 300,000 barrels a day, halted operations, Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces said. Bloomberg couldn’t independently verify the claim, and Lukoil didn’t immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.  Since last month, Ukrainian military forces have intensified drone attacks on Russian energy infrastructure, including oil refineries, aiming to curb fuel supplies to the front lines. In August, at least 13 strikes were made, the largest monthly number since the start of the invasion in Ukraine. So far in September there have been at least six attacks. Last week, drones also hit Russia’s largest Baltic oil terminal in Primorsk, and Ukraine claimed strikes on pumping stations feeding another Baltic hub, the Ust-Luga terminal.  Ukrainian drones hit one of the primary processing units at the Salavat facility, according to a person familiar with the matter. The unit has a design capacity to process 4 million tons of condensate per year, which is equivalent to about 80,000 barrels a day, according to the website of the refinery. The entire facility is designed to have a crude-oil-processing capacity of around 200,000 barrels a day. Meanwhile, the press service for governor Khabirov said in a separate statement that the Salavat refinery continues normal operations and that the fire has been localized. Neither claim could be independently verified. As a

Read More »

Energy Department Launches Speed to Power Initiative, Accelerating Large-Scale Grid Infrastructure Projects

WASHINGTON—The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced today the Speed to Power initiative, to accelerate the speed of large-scale grid infrastructure project development for both transmission and generation. The Speed to Power initiative will help ensure the United States has the power needed to win the global artificial intelligence (AI) race while continuing to meet growing demand for affordable, reliable and secure energy. DOE analysis shows that the current rate of project development is inadequate to support the country’s rapidly expanding manufacturing needs and the reindustrialization of the U.S. economy. DOE is committed to collaborating with stakeholders to identify large-scale grid infrastructure projects that can bring speed to power and overcome the complex challenges facing the grid.   “In the coming years, Americans will require more energy to power their homes and businesses – and with President Trump’s leadership, the Department of Energy is ensuring we can meet this growing demand while fueling AI and data center development with affordable, reliable and secure sources,” said Energy Secretary Chris Wright. “With the Speed to Power initiative, we’re leveraging the expertise of the private sector to harness all forms of energy that are affordable, reliable and secure to ensure the United States is able to win the AI race.”   To kickstart the Speed to Power initiative, DOE is issuing a Request for Information focused on large-scale grid infrastructure projects, both transmission and generation, that can accelerate the United States speed to power. This includes input on near-term investment opportunities, project readiness, load growth expectations, and infrastructure constraints that DOE can address. The DOE is requesting stakeholder input on how to best leverage its funding programs and authorities to rapidly expand energy generation and transmission grid capacity.  President Trump’s Executive Order, Declaring a National Energy Emergency, signed on his first day in office asserted that the integrity

Read More »

Regulators approve demand charge, net metering changes for NV Energy

Beginning in April 2026, NV Energy will add a daily demand charge for residential and small business customers that could add more than $30 to some monthly bills, consumer advocates warned in the wake of a Tuesday decision by state utility regulators. The Public Utility Commission of Nevada unanimously approved a new rate design for customers in the southern portion of the state, along with changing the utility’s net metering design in ways that solar advocates say will weaken customer protections and set back Nevada’s clean energy goals. The decision cut “more than a third” from NV Energy’s $224 million rate request, regulators said. The full customer impact remains unclear. “At the end of the day, my goal in drafting this order was to find a way to make sure that folks were paying for the cost of the service that’s provided to them,” Commissioner Tammy Cordova said at the PUC hearing. “We can disagree on whether this draft order achieves that, but that was my goal.” The order was approved 3-0, without modifications. Several members of the public spoke before the commission opposing the order. Janet Carter, vice chair of Sierra Club’s Toiyabe Chapter, told regulators her organization opposed NV Energy’s changes, and in particular shifts to the net metering program in the utility’s northern service territory, where it will calculate credits for energy returned to the grid every 15 minutes, rather than monthly as it does now. “This makes it confusing to the public and difficult to look at the energy bill and see if the charges are correct,” Carter said. “Already, people are cutting down on their usage of air conditioning because of the high rates they are experiencing — and for many people, this may increase their rates and make it more difficult to pay their utility

Read More »

Keeping America’s lights on: a pragmatic path forward

Brigham McCown is a senior fellow and director of the Initiative on American Energy Security at Hudson Institute and a professor of practice at Miami University. America’s energy infrastructure is experiencing unprecedented strain as AI, data centers, a revitalized manufacturing sector, and electric vehicles have all gobbled up electricity at an unprecedented rate. While new technologies can unlock enormous potential, electricity demand is outpacing capacity, with consequences far beyond short-term inconvenience. Without strategic intervention, the nation risks recurrent blackouts and escalating energy costs, which could impose significant burdens on households, enterprises, and communities. U.S. electricity demand is projected to grow 15.8% by 2029. ICF International expects record-high national power consumption in 2025 and 2026, with demand rising 25% by 2030 and 78% by 2050. As consumption rises, utilities also expect rate increases between 15% and 40%. Without intervention, American families and businesses will find it increasingly challenging to access dependable and affordable electricity. As the U.S. Department of Energy recently warned in its reliability outlook, this is not a distant challenge, and protecting existing baseload power may not be enough to protect against future shortages. While the long-term horizon provides ample time to ramp up, the next decade looks far less promising as retirements of fossil fuel-based power plants will rapidly outpace new deployments. Electricity bills and brownouts could become a reality. Energy abundance lowers prices and generates economic activity, economic security and national security. On the other hand, energy poverty results in scarcity, high prices, and insecurity. Fortunately, solutions are within reach. Initiatives like the Desert Southwest pipeline, which will deliver natural gas from West Texas to Arizona, demonstrate how targeted infrastructure can stabilize energy supplies in high-demand regions. Coupled with modernized grids and expanded transmission networks, these efforts can support emerging technologies while ensuring reliability. The focus must clearly align with an energy

Read More »

Ethernet, InfiniBand, and Omni-Path battle for the AI-optimized data center

IEEE 802.3df-2024. The IEEE 802.3df-2024 standard, completed in February 2024 marked a watershed moment for AI data center networking. The 800 Gigabit Ethernet specification provides the foundation for next-generation AI clusters. It uan 8-lane parallel structure that enables flexible port configurations from a single 800GbE port: 2×400GbE, 4×200GbE or 8×100GbE depending on workload requirements. The standard maintains backward compatibility with existing 100Gb/s electrical and optical signaling. This protects existing infrastructure investments while enabling seamless migration paths. UEC 1.0. The Ultra Ethernet Consortium represents the industry’s most ambitious attempt to optimize Ethernet for AI workloads. The consortium released its UEC 1.0 specification in 2025, marking a critical milestone for AI networking. The specification introduces modern RDMA implementations, enhanced transport protocols and advanced congestion control mechanisms that eliminate the need for traditional lossless networks. UEC 1.0 enables packet spraying at the switch level with reordering at the NIC, delivering capabilities previously available only in proprietary systems The UEC specification also includes Link Level Retry (LLR) for lossless transmission without traditional Priority Flow Control, addressing one of Ethernet’s historical weaknesses versus InfiniBand.LLR operates at the link layer to detect and retransmit lost packets locally, avoiding expensive recovery mechanisms at higher layers. Packet Rate Improvement (PRI) with header compression reduces protocol overhead, while network probes provide real-time congestion visibility. InfiniBand extends architectural advantages to 800Gb/s InfiniBand emerged in the late 1990s as a high-performance interconnect designed specifically for server-to-server communication in data centers. Unlike Ethernet, which evolved from local area networking,InfiniBand was purpose-built for the demanding requirements of clustered computing. The technology provides lossless, ultra-low latency communication through hardware-based flow control and specialized network adapters. The technology’s key advantage lies in its credit-based flow control. Unlike Ethernet’s packet-based approach, InfiniBand prevents packet loss by ensuring receiving buffers have space before transmission begins. This eliminates

Read More »

Land and Expand: CleanArc Data Centers, Google, Duke Energy, Aligned’s ODATA, Fermi America

Land and Expand is a monthly feature at Data Center Frontier highlighting the latest data center development news, including new sites, land acquisitions and campus expansions. Here are some of the new and notable developments from hyperscale and colocation data center operators about which we’ve been reading lately. Caroline County, VA, Approves 650-Acre Data Center Campus from CleanArc Caroline County, Virginia, has approved redevelopment of the former Virginia Bazaar property in Ruther Glen into a 650-acre data center campus in partnership with CleanArc Data Centers Operating, LLC. On September 9, 2025, the Caroline County Board of Supervisors unanimously approved an economic development performance agreement with CleanArc to transform the long-vacant flea market site just off I-95. The agreement allows for the phased construction of three initial data center buildings, each measuring roughly 500,000 square feet, which CleanArc plans to lease to major operators. The project represents one of the county’s largest-ever private investments. While CleanArc has not released a final capital cost, county filings suggest the development could reach into the multi-billion-dollar range over its full buildout. Key provisions include: Local hiring: At least 50 permanent jobs at no less than 150% of the prevailing county wage. Revenue sharing: Caroline County will provide annual incentive grants equal to 25% of incremental tax revenue generated by the campus. Water stewardship: CleanArc is prohibited from using potable county water for data center cooling, requiring the developer to pursue alternative technologies such as non-potable sources, recycled water, or advanced liquid cooling systems. Local officials have emphasized the deal’s importance for diversifying the county’s tax base, while community observers will be watching closely to see which cooling strategies CleanArc adopts in order to comply with the water-use restrictions. Google to Build $10 Billion Data Center Campus in Arkansas Moses Tucker Partners, one of Arkansas’

Read More »

Hyperion and Alice & Bob Call on HPC Centers to Prepare Now for Early Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing

As the data center industry continues to chase greater performance for AI and scientific workloads, a new joint report from Hyperion Research and Alice & Bob is urging high performance computing (HPC) centers to take immediate steps toward integrating early fault-tolerant quantum computing (eFTQC) into their infrastructure. The report, “Seizing Quantum’s Edge: Why and How HPC Should Prepare for eFTQC,” paints a clear picture: the next five years will demand hybrid HPC-quantum workflows if institutions want to stay at the forefront of computational science. According to the analysis, up to half of current HPC workloads at U.S. government research labs—Los Alamos National Laboratory, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, and Department of Energy leadership computing facilities among them—could benefit from the speedups and efficiency gains of eFTQC. “Quantum technologies are a pivotal opportunity for the HPC community, offering the potential to significantly accelerate a wide range of critical science and engineering applications in the near-term,” said Bob Sorensen, Senior VP and Chief Analyst for Quantum Computing at Hyperion Research. “However, these machines won’t be plug-and-play, so HPC centers should begin preparing for integration now, ensuring they can influence system design and gain early operational expertise.” The HPC Bottleneck: Why Quantum is Urgent The report underscores a familiar challenge for the HPC community: classical performance gains have slowed as transistor sizes approach physical limits and energy efficiency becomes increasingly difficult to scale. Meanwhile, the threshold for useful quantum applications is drawing nearer. Advances in qubit stability and error correction, particularly Alice & Bob’s cat qubit technology, have compressed the resource requirements for algorithms like Shor’s by an estimated factor of 1,000. Within the next five years, the report projects that quantum computers with 100–1,000 logical qubits and logical error rates between 10⁻⁶ and 10⁻¹⁰ will accelerate applications across materials science, quantum

Read More »

Google Partners With Utilities to Ease AI Data Center Grid Strain

Transmission and Power Strategy These agreements build on Google’s growing set of strategies to manage electricity needs. In June of 2025, Google announced a deal with CTC Global to upgrade transmission lines with high-capacity composite conductors that increase throughput without requiring new towers. In July 2025, Google and Brookfield Asset Management unveiled a hydropower framework agreement worth up to $3 billion, designed to secure firm clean energy for data centers in PJM and Eastern markets. Alongside renewable deals, Google has signed nuclear supply agreements as well, most notably a landmark contract with Kairos Power for small modular reactor capacity. Each of these moves reflects Google’s effort to create more headroom on the grid while securing firm, carbon-free power. Workload Flexibility and Grid Innovation The demand-response strategy is uniquely suited to AI data centers because of workload diversity. Machine learning training runs can sometimes be paused or rescheduled, unlike latency-sensitive workloads. This flexibility allows Google to throttle certain compute-heavy processes in coordination with utilities. In practice, Google can preemptively pause or shift workloads when notified of peak events, ensuring critical services remain uninterrupted while still creating significant grid relief. Local Utility Impact For utilities like I&M and TVA, partnering with hyperscale customers has a dual benefit: stabilizing the grid while keeping large customers satisfied and growing within their service territories. It also signals to regulators and ratepayers that data centers, often criticized for their heavy energy footprint, can actively contribute to reliability. These agreements may help avoid contentious rate cases or delays in permitting new power plants. Policy, Interconnection Queues, and the Economics of Speed One of the biggest hurdles for data center development today is the long wait in interconnection queues. In regions like PJM Interconnection, developers often face waits of three to five years before new projects can connect

Read More »

Generators, Gas, and Grid Strategy: Inside Generac’s Data Center Play

A Strategic Leap Generac’s entry represents a strategic leap. Long established as a leader in residential, commercial, and industrial generation—particularly in the sub-2 megawatt range—the company has now expanded into mission-critical applications with new products spanning 2.2 to 3.5 megawatts. Navarro said the timing was deliberate, citing market constraints that have slowed hyperscale and colocation growth. “The current OEMs serving this market are actually limiting the ability to produce and to grow the data center market,” he noted. “Having another player … with enough capacity to compensate those shortfalls has been received very, very well.” While Generac isn’t seeking to reinvent the wheel, it is intent on differentiation. Customers, Navarro explained, want a good quality product, uneventful deployment, and a responsive support network. On top of those essentials, Generac is leveraging its ongoing transformation from generator manufacturer to energy technology company, a shift accelerated by a series of acquisitions in areas like telemetry, monitoring, and energy management. “We’ve made several acquisitions to move away from being just a generator manufacturer to actually being an energy technology company,” Navarro said. “So we are entering this space of energy efficiency, energy management—monitoring, telemetrics, everything that improves the experience and improves the usage of those generators and the energy management at sites.” That foundation positions Generac to meet the newest challenge reshaping backup generation: the rise of AI-centric workloads. Natural Gas Interest—and the Race to Shorter Lead Times As the industry looks beyond diesel, customer interest in natural gas generation is rising. Navarro acknowledged the shift, but noted that diesel still retains an edge. “We’ve seen an increase on gas requests,” he said. “But the power density of diesel is more convenient than gas today.” That tradeoff, however, could narrow. Navarro pointed to innovations such as industrial storage paired with gas units, which

Read More »

Executive Roundtable: Cooling, Costs, and Integration in the AI Data Center Era

Becky Wacker, Trane:  As AI workloads increasingly dominate new data center builds, operators face significant challenges in managing thermal loads and water resources. These challenges include significantly higher heat density, large, aggregated load spikes, uneven distribution of cooling needs, and substantial water requirements if using traditional evaporative cooling methods. The most critical risks include overheating, inefficient cooling systems, and water scarcity. These issues can lead to reduced hardware lifespan, hardware throttling, sudden shutdowns, failure to meet PUE targets, higher operational costs, and limitations on where AI data centers can be built due to water constraints. At Trane, we are evolving our solutions to meet these challenges through advanced cooling technologies such as liquid cooling and immersion cooling, which offer higher efficiency and lower thermal resistance compared to traditional air-cooling methods. Flexibility and scalability are central to our design philosophy. We believe a total system solution is crucial, integrating components such as CDUs, Fan Walls, CRAHs, and Chillers to anticipate demand and respond effectively. In addition, we are developing smart monitoring and control systems that leverage AI to predict and manage thermal loads in real-time, ensuring optimal performance and preventing overheating through Building Management Systems and integration with DCIM platforms. Our water management solutions are also being enhanced to recycle and reuse water, minimizing consumption and addressing scarcity concerns.

Read More »

Microsoft will invest $80B in AI data centers in fiscal 2025

And Microsoft isn’t the only one that is ramping up its investments into AI-enabled data centers. Rival cloud service providers are all investing in either upgrading or opening new data centers to capture a larger chunk of business from developers and users of large language models (LLMs).  In a report published in October 2024, Bloomberg Intelligence estimated that demand for generative AI would push Microsoft, AWS, Google, Oracle, Meta, and Apple would between them devote $200 billion to capex in 2025, up from $110 billion in 2023. Microsoft is one of the biggest spenders, followed closely by Google and AWS, Bloomberg Intelligence said. Its estimate of Microsoft’s capital spending on AI, at $62.4 billion for calendar 2025, is lower than Smith’s claim that the company will invest $80 billion in the fiscal year to June 30, 2025. Both figures, though, are way higher than Microsoft’s 2020 capital expenditure of “just” $17.6 billion. The majority of the increased spending is tied to cloud services and the expansion of AI infrastructure needed to provide compute capacity for OpenAI workloads. Separately, last October Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said his company planned total capex spend of $75 billion in 2024 and even more in 2025, with much of it going to AWS, its cloud computing division.

Read More »

John Deere unveils more autonomous farm machines to address skill labor shortage

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Self-driving tractors might be the path to self-driving cars. John Deere has revealed a new line of autonomous machines and tech across agriculture, construction and commercial landscaping. The Moline, Illinois-based John Deere has been in business for 187 years, yet it’s been a regular as a non-tech company showing off technology at the big tech trade show in Las Vegas and is back at CES 2025 with more autonomous tractors and other vehicles. This is not something we usually cover, but John Deere has a lot of data that is interesting in the big picture of tech. The message from the company is that there aren’t enough skilled farm laborers to do the work that its customers need. It’s been a challenge for most of the last two decades, said Jahmy Hindman, CTO at John Deere, in a briefing. Much of the tech will come this fall and after that. He noted that the average farmer in the U.S. is over 58 and works 12 to 18 hours a day to grow food for us. And he said the American Farm Bureau Federation estimates there are roughly 2.4 million farm jobs that need to be filled annually; and the agricultural work force continues to shrink. (This is my hint to the anti-immigration crowd). John Deere’s autonomous 9RX Tractor. Farmers can oversee it using an app. While each of these industries experiences their own set of challenges, a commonality across all is skilled labor availability. In construction, about 80% percent of contractors struggle to find skilled labor. And in commercial landscaping, 86% of landscaping business owners can’t find labor to fill open positions, he said. “They have to figure out how to do

Read More »

2025 playbook for enterprise AI success, from agents to evals

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More 2025 is poised to be a pivotal year for enterprise AI. The past year has seen rapid innovation, and this year will see the same. This has made it more critical than ever to revisit your AI strategy to stay competitive and create value for your customers. From scaling AI agents to optimizing costs, here are the five critical areas enterprises should prioritize for their AI strategy this year. 1. Agents: the next generation of automation AI agents are no longer theoretical. In 2025, they’re indispensable tools for enterprises looking to streamline operations and enhance customer interactions. Unlike traditional software, agents powered by large language models (LLMs) can make nuanced decisions, navigate complex multi-step tasks, and integrate seamlessly with tools and APIs. At the start of 2024, agents were not ready for prime time, making frustrating mistakes like hallucinating URLs. They started getting better as frontier large language models themselves improved. “Let me put it this way,” said Sam Witteveen, cofounder of Red Dragon, a company that develops agents for companies, and that recently reviewed the 48 agents it built last year. “Interestingly, the ones that we built at the start of the year, a lot of those worked way better at the end of the year just because the models got better.” Witteveen shared this in the video podcast we filmed to discuss these five big trends in detail. Models are getting better and hallucinating less, and they’re also being trained to do agentic tasks. Another feature that the model providers are researching is a way to use the LLM as a judge, and as models get cheaper (something we’ll cover below), companies can use three or more models to

Read More »

OpenAI’s red teaming innovations define new essentials for security leaders in the AI era

Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More OpenAI has taken a more aggressive approach to red teaming than its AI competitors, demonstrating its security teams’ advanced capabilities in two areas: multi-step reinforcement and external red teaming. OpenAI recently released two papers that set a new competitive standard for improving the quality, reliability and safety of AI models in these two techniques and more. The first paper, “OpenAI’s Approach to External Red Teaming for AI Models and Systems,” reports that specialized teams outside the company have proven effective in uncovering vulnerabilities that might otherwise have made it into a released model because in-house testing techniques may have missed them. In the second paper, “Diverse and Effective Red Teaming with Auto-Generated Rewards and Multi-Step Reinforcement Learning,” OpenAI introduces an automated framework that relies on iterative reinforcement learning to generate a broad spectrum of novel, wide-ranging attacks. Going all-in on red teaming pays practical, competitive dividends It’s encouraging to see competitive intensity in red teaming growing among AI companies. When Anthropic released its AI red team guidelines in June of last year, it joined AI providers including Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, and even the U.S.’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which all had released red teaming frameworks. Investing heavily in red teaming yields tangible benefits for security leaders in any organization. OpenAI’s paper on external red teaming provides a detailed analysis of how the company strives to create specialized external teams that include cybersecurity and subject matter experts. The goal is to see if knowledgeable external teams can defeat models’ security perimeters and find gaps in their security, biases and controls that prompt-based testing couldn’t find. What makes OpenAI’s recent papers noteworthy is how well they define using human-in-the-middle

Read More »