Vanderbilt prof: Tech giants driving clean energy adoption in Southeast

Vadenbergh, Pixabay, Creative Commons, solar, Vanderbergh

Across the southeastern U.S., wind turbines are spinning on hilltops, and solar panels stretch across roofs and fields.

Michael Vandenbergh of Vanderbilt Law School says part of the reason is that large companies like Google, Facebook, and Microsoft are demanding low-carbon energy for their facilities.

Vandenbergh: “When they are looking to relocate facilities in the Southeast, they are often saying ‘We’ll relocate our data center in your state, but we want 100 percent renewable power when we do that.’ And what that is doing is producing private market pressure within states to reduce carbon emissions.”

For example, Facebook is building a new data center near Atlanta. The almost one-million-square-foot building will be powered by hundreds of acres of solar panels, installed by the local utility.

Vandenbergh, who researches the relationship between regulation and clean energy, says many people in the Southeast are wary of government-led energy projects. But the demand by private companies for clean energy can help shift public opinions.

Vandenbergh: “It changes the dialogue from a big-government versus not-big-government question to one about how are we going to account for the fact that the marketplace is demanding low carbon power.”

And he says that can ultimately help generate more widespread support for clean energy projects.

This article was republished from Yale Climate Connections via Creative Commons. Additional reporting by Sarah Kennedy/ChavoBart Digital Media. The Living Building Chronicle added background on Vanderbergh to the story.