Microsoft’s carbon emissions surged 25% year-over-year, reaching 34 million metric tons

Microsoft’s 2026 Sustainability Report
Microsoft’s carbon emissions rose 25% in 2025, driven by data center expansion and AI infrastructure, according to its 2026 sustainability report. The increase marks a setback for the company’s 2030 carbon-negative goal, with emissions reaching 34 million metric tons.

Microsoft’s 2026 Sustainability Report

Microsoft’s 2026 Sustainability Report

Theverge.com

Microsoft’s 2025 carbon emissions surged 25% year-over-year, reaching 34 million metric tons, as the company expanded its data center infrastructure and shifted away from certain renewable energy credits, according to its 2026 sustainability report. The report, first detailed by GeekWire, attributes the rise to the rapid growth of AI-driven computing and the decision to stop purchasing “non-additional, unbundled renewable energy certificates” in February 2025. This move, while aimed at more transparent carbon accounting, removed a key tool for offsetting emissions. “While AI infrastructure is driving demand for energy, water, land, and materials, sustainability solutions are not scaling fast enough to meet demand,” the report admits.

Alistair Speirs on AI Infrastructure Challenges

Alistair Speirs on AI Infrastructure Challenges

Theverge.com

The increase reflects broader challenges in the tech sector, as Google and Amazon also reported double-digit emissions growth in their 2025 environmental updates. Google’s emissions rose 18%, while Amazon’s climbed 16%, though Microsoft’s 25% jump stands out as one of the sharpest year-over-year increases disclosed by a major tech player. The company’s 2026 report highlights a big leap in electricity-related emissions, which accounted for 13% of its total footprint in 2025—a jump from 2% in 2024. Microsoft consumed 37 million megawatt-hours (MWh) of electricity in 2025, up 24% from 2024, enough to power 3.4 million U.S. homes annually. North America alone accounted for 56% of this energy use.

Monarch Compute Campus in West Virginia

Monarch Compute Campus in West Virginia
Photo: theverge.com

Trellis.net

Microsoft’s expansion of AI infrastructure has strained its environmental commitments, with Alistair Speirs, general manager of Azure infrastructure, describing the challenge as a “moonshot.” Despite achieving a goal of matching data center energy consumption with renewable sources last year, Speirs warned that maintaining this balance may become harder. “We’re doing that through projects like green steel, cross-laminated timber to replace other building materials, with new forms of concrete as well,” he said. The company is also testing automation to optimize AI workloads between renewable-powered data centers and investing in emerging technologies like superconducting cables from startup Veir

Microsoft’s 2030 Carbon-Negative Goal

Microsoft’s AI Buildout Sent Carbon Emissions Up 25% Last Year

Kuow.org

The shift in Microsoft’s emissions strategy has drawn scrutiny, particularly as the company moves away from “non-additional” renewable energy certificates. These credits, which allowed companies to offset emissions without necessarily changing their actual energy consumption, were replaced with long-term contracts for new renewable energy generation. This change, while more aligned with sustainability goals, has led to a more transparent but starkly higher emissions figure. “We do not see these dynamics as a reason to step back,” Microsoft Vice Chair and President Brad Smith and Chief Sustainability Officer Melanie Nakagawa wrote in the report’s foreword. “We see them as a mandate to lead differently.”

Trellis.net

Microsoft’s data center buildout, which includes projects like the Monarch Compute Campus in West Virginia—a facility that will be powered exclusively by natural gas generators—has intensified concerns about its environmental impact. The company’s 2026 report also revealed a 24% increase in electricity consumption compared to 2024, with Boydton, Virginia, data center using over 3 million MWh alone. To address these challenges, Microsoft has pledged to invest in smaller clean energy projects near data centers, with new contracts for 1.5 gigawatts across 100 communities in 20 states. It is also exploring nuclear and geothermal energy through partnerships with startups like Eavor Technologies.

Kuow.org

The company’s environmental goals face further pressure as it continues to invest heavily in AI infrastructure. During its Q3 FY2026 earnings call, CEO Satya Nadella confirmed that Microsoft remains on track to double our overall footprint in just two years, with $31.9 billion in capital expenditures for the quarter. While this includes a portion for data center leases, CFO Amy Hood acknowledged ongoing capacity constraints, citing “$25bn higher component pricing” as a factor. Despite these challenges, Microsoft’s cloud revenue rose 29% year-over-year to $54.5 billion, with Azure revenue growing 40%.

Datacenterdynamics.com

Microsoft’s environmental struggles are compounded by its evolving relationship with OpenAI. The company recently revised its agreement with the AI firm, losing IP exclusivity rights. This shift raises questions about how Microsoft will balance AI growth with its climate commitments. “We have been in an accelerated phase of trying to get as much capacity as we can into production,” Hood said, emphasizing the need to “put pressure on efficiencies” to meet demand.

Datacenterdynamics.com

As Microsoft grapples with these contradictions, its 2026 report underscores the tension between AI ambition and sustainability. The company’s 2030 goal of becoming carbon negative now seems increasingly distant, with emissions rising at a pace that outstrips its green energy investments. This is a challenge, Speirs said. “When we described our environmental goals back in 2020, we described it as a moonshot.” The next few years will test whether Microsoft can reconcile its AI expansion with its climate promises, as competitors and regulators closely watch its progress.

Find more reporting in our Tech section.

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