Skip to main content

Tech giants: Blocking Clean Power Plan will be ‘costly’

tech giants amicus cpp wind farm 2
Dong Energy
Climate change is no joke, and that’s why Google, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft have filed an amicus brief supporting the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan.

The Clean Power Plan was issued in 2015, and will allow the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate emissions by requiring states to cut greenhouse gas pollution from electric power plants around the United States, according to The New York Times. The Supreme Court blocked the plan temporarily in February, after it received stay applications from more than 24 states and various energy industry groups.

Recommended Videos

The Obama administration, environmental groups, states, and more than 200 former and current lawmakers have thrown their support for the plan, according to The Hill, and you can now add some of the world’s biggest tech companies to that list.

Amazon, Apple, Google, and Microsoft say that as large companies, “tech amici” are some of the biggest consumers of electricity. As such, the four have taken steps to reduce consumption, to ensure a more sustainable method through renewable resources.

“This commitment reflects Tech Amici’s belief that delaying action on climate change will be costly in economic and human terms, while accelerating the transition to a low-carbon economy will produce multiple benefits with regard to sustainable economic growth, public health, resilience to natural disasters, and the health of the global environment,” according to the brief filed on April 1.

With a collective market capitalization of more than “$1.7 trillion,” the quartet believe their achievements and experience in shifting to renewable energy puts them in a strong position to endorse the CPP, and relieve any fears surrounding it.

Amazon made a long-term green energy pledge in 2014, to achieve “100 percent renewable energy usage” for its global infrastructure footprint.  Apple buys and generates renewable power for 100 percent of its U.S. facilities, and 93 percent of its worldwide facilities. Google has bought 2 gigawatts of renewable energy to date, “making it the largest corporate purchaser of renewable energy in the world.” Google has been carbon neutral since 2007, and Microsoft has been carbon neutral since 2012, and also has a long-term goal of making all of its operations run on 100 percent renewable energy.

You can read the full brief here. The case is scheduled for oral argument on June 2.

Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
Trump’s TikTok meddling means we’ll never be able to escape Big Tech
Styled Graphic featuring Tim Cook, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai

Over the years, the one criticism Big Tech has been unable to overcome is the ongoing dialogue about how these companies' seemingly boundless power is a threat to the open market and needs a more strident set of regulations.

Last week, the CEOs of four of those companies — Facebook, Google, Amazon, and Apple — appeared in a virtual antitrust hearing to address whether they are turning into monopolies.

Read more
Tech giants back suit against Trump rule that may deport students
Georgia Tech AI

Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and several other major tech companies oppose a new Trump administration rule that may send international students home if they don't physically attend classes this fall.

Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology recently filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), over rules that require in-person teaching for student visas. This means that international students who are enrolled in universities that are not holding in-person classes may be deported to their home countries.

Read more
Big Tech and Big Talk: Did tech giants deliver on any of their promises in 2019?
Google & Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai

Most marquee tech companies stepped into 2019 with a mountain of responsibilities on their shoulders.

Mired in lawsuits and with a Congress teeming with inexorable questions hot on their heels, tech giants this year came to terms with the fact that their jobs were simply not just building new, shiny slabs of glass or figuring out how to emulate human emotions in virtual assistants. They will remember 2019 as a precursor to a new era -- one where they could no longer escape the broader implications of their actions and products.

Read more