Datacentre Sustainability Efforts Stall: A Retreat from Net-Zero Commitments?
The aspiring push towards sustainable datacentre operations appears to be losing momentum. New research from the Uptime Institute, a leading authority on server farm resiliency, indicates a concerning trend: a stagnation, and even decline, in sustainability data collection across the industry. This shift suggests a potential rollback of previously stated net-zero commitments, raising questions about the future of environmental responsibility within the rapidly expanding digital infrastructure landscape.
For years, the datacentre industry has been under increasing pressure to reduce its environmental impact. Driven by both regulatory scrutiny and a growing awareness of its substantial energy consumption, operators have actively tracked and reported on key sustainability metrics. Though, the Uptime Institute’s 15th annual Global Datacentre Survey, based on feedback from 800 datacentre owners and operators, alongside over 1,000 suppliers and consultants, paints a different picture for the past 12 months.
data collection Declines – Even on Core Metrics
While energy consumption remains the most readily tracked metric, the percentage of operators actively monitoring it has decreased from 89% in 2024 to 84% currently.Similarly, tracking of Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) – a key indicator of datacentre energy efficiency – has fallen from 76% to 74% over the same period.This isn’t simply a minor fluctuation; it represents a importent pause in the progress made towards greater clarity and accountability.
“After years of gradual increases, our survey results show that sustainability data collection for nearly all metrics has stagnated or even declined since 2024,” the Uptime Institute report states. “While PUE and energy consumption remain widely tracked, the broad pattern is static.”
Regulatory Shifts and practical Challenges fuel the Slowdown
Several factors are contributing to this concerning trend. A key driver is the evolving regulatory landscape. In the United states, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s decision to abandon mandatory climate risk reporting, including greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, has removed a significant incentive for operators to prioritize data collection.Similarly, delays in GHG reporting requirements under the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, coupled with proposed exemptions for many organizations, are weakening the impetus for complete sustainability reporting in Europe.
This shift towards what the Uptime Institute describes as “laissez-faire governance regimes” is creating a permissive surroundings where sustainability efforts can be deprioritized.
Beyond regulatory changes, practical challenges are also playing a role. The current boom in datacentre construction, especially driven by the demand for AI infrastructure, presents significant hurdles. These large-scale expansion projects are inherently resource-intensive, making sustainability goals more difficult to achieve and potentially diminishing operators’ willingness to invest in detailed data tracking.The Rising Cost of Sustainability – and the Appeal of Offsets
The financial burden of achieving sustainability targets is also increasing. Reliance on power Purchase Agreements (ppas) and Energy Attribute Certificates (EACs) – mechanisms used to offset energy consumption and carbon emissions - are becoming increasingly expensive. This cost pressure may be prompting some operators to quietly abandon or postpone their net-zero targets,or even cease tracking and reporting emissions altogether.
Uptime Institute’s previous research has already hinted at this trend, suggesting that many datacentre operators are re-evaluating their sustainability commitments.The rising cost of offsets provides a plausible clarification for why some are choosing to retreat from these ambitious goals.
Water Usage: A Rare Luminous Spot
Interestingly, water usage is the only metric showing a slight increase in data collection, driven primarily by a 5% rise in Europe. This is highly likely a direct response to the European Union’s Energy Efficiency Directive (EED),which mandates water usage reporting. This demonstrates that clear regulatory requirements can effectively drive sustainability data collection.
Implications and the Path Forward
The stagnation in sustainability data collection is a worrying sign. It suggests a potential weakening of commitment to environmental responsibility within the datacentre industry. Without accurate data, it’s unachievable to effectively measure progress, identify areas for betterment, and hold operators accountable.
To reverse this trend, a multi-faceted approach is needed:
Stronger, More Consistent Regulations: Clear and consistent regulatory frameworks, like the EU’s EED, are crucial for driving data collection and accountability.
Industry Collaboration: Greater collaboration between datacentre operators, suppliers, and policymakers is needed to develop standardized reporting metrics and best practices.
* Investment in Sustainable Technologies: Continued investment in energy-efficient hardware,