AWS re:Invent 2024: Can Amazon and Partners Propel Sustainable IT Services Forward?
November 29, 2024 by Joe Panettieri
At the AWS re:Invent 2024 conference, Amazon executives and its sustainable IT services partners hope to end the year on a high note.
Dozens of guest speakers (pictured randomly above and some listed below) and roughly 25 content sessions will focus on sustainability, energy efficiency, carbon reduction and net-zero business strategies.
Sustainable IT Services: Marching Forward Amid Market Headwinds
Those AWS re:Invent 2024 discussions arrive at a critical time. Indeed, multiple geopolitical developments have raised question marks about net-zero efforts worldwide. Among the areas of potential concern:
At the COP29 conference -- hosted during November 2024 in Baku, Azerbaijan -- rich countries vowed to help poor and emerging countries with their climate-related costs, but some critics considered the agreement to be "too little, too late."
CSRD, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, went into effect in January 2023. But some critics are calling on the European Union to weaken or roll back the regulation.
Businesses worldwide are wondering if president-elect Donald Trump will pull the United States from the Paris agreement, and curtail various federal programs for renewable energy and climate tech solutions.
Data centers are consuming more and more energy amid power-hungry generative AI (genAI) application rollouts. As a result, many data center and cloud companies will need to rewrite and/or adjust their sustainable IT strategies.
AWS Leaders, Partners Describe Sustainable IT Strategies
Amid those potential market headwinds, Amazon Web Services (AWS) and many partners continue to promote sustainable IT services strategies that may help customers with their net-zero strategies.
Still, some critics continue to raise questions about the effort. Among the anecdotes to note:
Tech giants Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Meta say they buy enough wind, solar or geothermal power every time a big data center comes online to cancel out its emissions, The Washington Post reports. But critics see a shell game with these contracts: The companies are operating off the same power grid as everyone else, while claiming for themselves much of the finite amount of green energy, the Post asserted. Utilities are then backfilling those purchases with fossil fuel expansions, regulatory filings show, the report claimed.
Moreover, most Amazon corporate workers are worried that senior leadership is misleading the public about Amazon's climate impact, according to an independent survey spanning 800 Amazon workers.
We'll keep those points in mind as we watch AWS re:Invent 2024 for new sustainable IT services, products, partners and milestones.
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