
Google inks $3bn US hydropower deal as it expands energy-hungry datacenters
The deal between Google and Brookfield Asset Management includes initial 20-year power purchase agreements, totaling $3bn, for electricity generated from two hydropower facilities in Pennsylvania.
The tech giant will also invest $25bn in datacenters across Pennsylvania and neighboring states over the next two years, Semafor reported on Tuesday.
The technology industry is intensifying the hunt for huge amounts of clean electricity to power datacenters needed for artificial intelligence and cloud computing, which has driven US power consumption to record highs after nearly two decades of stagnation.
Ruth Porat, president and chief investment officer at Google parent company Alphabet, discussed the news at an AI summit in Pittsburgh. Donald Trump announced $70bn in AI and energy investments there.
'This collaboration with Brookfield is a significant step forward, ensuring clean energy supply in the PJM region where we operate,' Amanda Peterson Corio, Google's head of datacenter energy, said in a statement.
Over roughly the last year, Google has struck several first-of-a-kind power purchase agreements, including for carbon-free geothermal energy and advanced nuclear. The company is also working with the country's largest electricity grid operator, PJM Interconnection, to use AI to speed up the process of hooking up new power supplies to the grid.
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Google said it has signed an initial framework agreement with Brookfield, owner of Brookfield Renewable Partners, which develops and operates renewable energy plants. Its two hydropower sites in Pennsylvania will be upgraded and relicensed as part of the arrangement, the companies said. Google said it plans to expand the deal eventually beyond those sites to other parts of the mid-Atlantic and midwest.

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Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
The jobs data revisions that cost a US government statistician her job
Aug 4 (Reuters) - The revisions to previous estimates of the size of U.S. payrolls gains for May and June that prompted President Donald Trump to fire Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer on Friday were by any measure extraordinarily large. Indeed, the combined downward revision for the two months of 258,000 was the largest - outside of those during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic - since at least 1979. Here's a quick graphical breakdown: The monthly nonfarm payrolls report, released typically on the first Friday of each month, includes an initial estimate of employment changes for the immediately preceding month and revisions to the earlier estimates for the prior two months. BLS makes the revisions because more survey responses come in over the ensuing weeks and because it updates the seasonal factors affecting each month's estimates. The BLS on Friday said 133,000 fewer jobs had been created in June than first estimated. Over the last several years, the first estimate of the net change in payrolls each month has been revised lower more often than not. It has been revised down in eight of the last 12 BLS reports over the last year. The downward revision on Friday was the largest since the first estimate of payrolls gains for March 2021, published in April 2021, was revised down by 146,000 a month later. Over the last three years through June, the median estimate revision was -10,000. That contrasts with a median increase of 8,000 during the decade before the pandemic and a median increase of 2,000 over the series history since 1979. The total for May's payroll gains was revised lower by 125,000 in Friday's report, when the third estimate for payrolls for that month was published. That figure was the largest downward reduction of payrolls gains for a second revision - outside of the pandemic era - since the estimate for March 1983 was revised down by 127,000 in the report published in June 1983. The combined downward revision for the two previous months - May and June - was larger than anything reported outside of the pandemic era. Indeed, the estimates for the two prior months combined have more often than not been revised higher. Since 1979, the median two-month combined estimate change was an upward revision of 10,000. Measured in absolute terms - revisions in either direction - Friday's revision also stands out. There have only been four larger revisions: +709,000 for November and December 2021; -642,000 for March and April 2020; +285,000 for August and September 1983; and +414,000 for April and May 1981.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Trump's demand that India stop buying Russian oil puts Modi in tight spot
The relationship between India and the US is facing one of its most significant challenges in decades, as the Trump administration doubles down on its demands that India stop buying Russian oil or face punitive tariffs. The US president, Donald Trump, has refused to cut tariffs on Indian exports to the US, as he has for other countries, and on Monday said he would significantly raise them over its purchases of cheap Russian oil, which now account for one-third of its imported oil. 'They don't care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian War Machine,' he said in a post to his Truth Social network, also accusing India of selling Russian oil 'on the Open Market for big profits'. In a previous social media tirade last week, he said of Russia and India: 'They can take their dead economies down together.' Appearing on Fox News on Sunday at the weekend, his hardline deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, did not hold back as he took direct aim at India, stating that Trump had made it clear it was 'it is not acceptable for India to continue financing this [Ukraine] war by purchasing the oil from Russia'. The whiplash the last days have caused in the corridors of New Delhi is palpable. It was only February when India's prime minister, Narendra Modi, was one of the first world leaders to be hosted by Trump and the two men embraced each other and hailed their 'great friendship'. Indian officials were adamant that Russia had not even come up in trade negotiations until Trump's public outburst. India had come to view the US as one of its strongest and most reliable partners, united by the bonhomie between its leaders and growing cooperation on everything from regional security and defence to bilateral trade, intelligence, technology and an increasingly powerful Indian diaspora in the United States. A united geopolitical ambition to counterbalance the power of China had only brought them further together under recent presidents. Yet it did not go unnoticed by India that China – the other big buyer of sanctioned Russian oil, which also has leverage over the US in the form of rare earths – has not received similar threats, and neither has Turkey. Trump's moves have been met with a frosty, if not outright defiant, reception among Indian officials. After Trump told reporters he that had heard India would 'no longer' be buying Russian oil, he was swiftly contradicted by Indian officials over the weekend, who said there would be no change in policy. Under India's 'non-alignment' foreign policy it has maintained a close partnership with Russia over decades while strengthening ties with the US; a position largely tolerated by Washington and reiterated by Randhir Jaiswal, the spokesperson for India's foreign ministry following Trump's threats. 'Our bilateral relationships with various countries stand on their own merit and should not be seen from the prism of a third country,' said Jaiswal. 'India and Russia have a steady and time-tested partnership.' In a column in the Indian Express, Shyam Saran, India's former foreign secretary, did not mince his words. 'Donald Trump was supposed to be good for India in his second presidency,' he said. 'He has turned out to be a nightmare.' Saran was among those who called for India to follow the example of China and Brazil and stand up to Trump. He insisted that although there would be 'pain in resisting Trump … we should be prepared to endure it'. 'Submitting to his exaggerated demands, which are now political as well as economic, would severely undermine India's national interests,' said Saran. 'We cannot give any country a veto over which countries India should or should not partner with.' It is widely agreed among analysts that Modi has now been put in an unenviable position by Trump; either acquiesce to Trump's demands and see loss of face domestically or reject them and face sky-high tariffs – and possibly other punitive actions – that would cripple the Indian economy. The Indian political scientist Pratap Bhanu Mehta said India was not the exception in mistakenly thinking that 'Trump is purely transactional and that by placating him, pandering to his ego and giving him good headlines, it will be enough to make him quietly dial back.' One of the major sticking points for Modi, he said, was the highly public nature of Trump's threats, which had complicated the possibility of backdoor negotiations over India quietly moving away from buying Russian oil and arms. He pointed out that Trump had already 'frankly humiliated the Indian prime minister' over the recent India-Pakistan conflict in May, where Trump had publicly taken the credit for negotiating a ceasefire – a position vehemently denied by the Modi government in the aftermath. Trump's recent embrace of Pakistan, signing deals with India's enemy on cryptocurrency, mining and oil – and even having the chagrin to suggest India may one day buy Pakistani oil – as well as hosting the Pakistan army chief for lunch in the White House, had only added insult to injury. Mehta said suspicions towards the US in New Delhi now resembled those of 1971, when President Richard Nixon and his national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, sent warships to India in what is considered one of the lowest points of the US-India relationship. 'The damage is already done,' said Mehta. 'No matter what deal they come to now, distrust of the US is only going to continue to skyrocket.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
The elite status symbol ultra-wealthy are now using to set themselves apart from wealthy
The new indicator of ultra wealth isn't owning mansions or diamonds, it's flying private. Owning personal jets, or even chartering private planes, is incredibly expensive. But as the number of millionaires and billionaires grows, it's becoming increasingly common. The price of a private jet depends on size, model, age and custom features – but it's certainly no less than a few million dollars, and can cost as much as $100 million. As of 2023 there are between 22,000 and 23,000 private jets exist worldwide - with 15,000 of them being in the US, according to Blackjet data. There was a major increase in private jet usage after the pandemic because flyers were concerned about getting COVID-19 on crowded commercial flights. Kenn Ricci, pilot and chairman of private-jet company Flexjet, said that the 'frugal wealthy' class of people who earn a lot of money but don't splurge started splashing out on travel during the pandemic and never went back. Hours flown in private-jet hours flown hit record numbers in 2022 and have stayed up ever since. 'It's in vogue to be wealthy,' Ricci told the Wall Street Journal. 'Sometimes we love the rich. Sometimes we hate the rich.' Private jets are thought to be used by the rich and famous, but others climbing up the wealth ladder are joining them in this luxury. Indeed, having 'private-jet money' is the new goal amongst the wealthy, dividing the 1 percent from the 0.1 percent. The US added more than 1,000 millionaires every day last year on average, according to UBS, and the billionaire club grew over 50 percent between 2015 and 2024. It costs between $5,000 and $15,000 per flying hour to charter a private jet depending on its size, according to Wheels Up a private jet membership and charter company. Maxx Chewning sold his sour-candy business Sour Strips to Hershey for $75.5 million in 2024 and the first thing he did was fly his wife and six friends to Vail on Dassault Falcon 900 private jet. He spent $100,000 so that they could skip security lines and fly in the comfort of leather recliners within the wood-paneled cabin. Chewning's goldendoodle Dood sprawled at their feet. 'The joke is, I had to get a private plane so I could bring my dog,' the 35-year-old said according to the WSJ. 'I didn't really care what the price was.' Tennille Holt, 44, retired in 2023 and nowadays spends her time traveling the world with her husband and eight-year-old cavapoo Hudson. Hudson, who has his own Instagram account where he documents his travels, has grown accustomed to being fed grilled chicken on private jets. Holt and her husband spent $200,000 to from Hudson from Australia to Los Angeles to avoid hauling him on the 14 hour commercial flight. 'The goal was to create the freedom to live life on our own terms, which now includes plenty of travel and the ability to fly privately whenever we want, ' Holt says. 'It's the best and most comfortable option for Hudson.' It's not just the comfort, privacy and convenience of private aviation that appeals to the rich and famous, such jets offer luxuries in the way of fine dining, spa treatments and advanced entertainment systems. Chef Nobu Matsuhisa created an exclusive a menu for VistaJet passengers that includes a Nobu steamed salmon dry miso dish. On some flights, cabin staff are trained to give travelers facials in their with Dr. Barbara Sturm's luxury skin care line. Kevin Hooks, 63, is a Flexjet customers who spends around $800,000 each year on private travel, usually to cross the Southwest in a Praetor 600 midsize business jet that seats nine. Hooks has been flying private for two years and says he has noticed plane hangars around the country growing more crowded since the pandemic. He still takes commercial planes sometimes and recalls his four-year-old son getting on a Southwest Airlines flight and asking, 'Who are these other people on the plane?' Kim Kardashian is one of many celebrities who has her own private jet, which she paid $150 million for. The luxurious Gulfstream G650ER private jet, nicknamed 'Kim Air', features cashmere-covered seats, custom light wood finishes and two bathrooms. It reportedly has 10 beds on it and each of the seats has its own charging points. Canadian rapper Drake's private jet is even more expensive, with an estimated cost of $185 million. The plane has a luxurious lounge area, a bedroom and also features Drake's own OVO - October's Very Own - owl symbol on the exterior.