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The AI Energy Reckoning: From Mega Data Centers to Small Local Models with IDC's Dan Versace
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AI workloads are forcing a reckoning. The mega data centers being built today will impact communities tenfold more than coal mines did during the Industrial Revolution, and most organizations still cannot answer a basic question: what is the carbon cost of their compute? In this episode of the Supply Chain Revolution podcast, Sheri Hinish sits down with Dan Versace, Senior Research Analyst for ESG Business Services at IDC, for a conversation about energy intelligence as the new operating discipline for AI, sustainability, and enterprise growth.
Dan brings an uncommon origin story to corporate sustainability. He started in environmental science, studying the effects of large operations on watersheds in New Hampshire. He then moved to the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee to conduct invasive species and climate change research, where he spent a year working in a single four-square-mile plot. When he asked when they would move to the next area, the answer was ten years. That was the moment he decided to scale his impact, earned a sustainable innovation MBA from the University of Vermont, and joined IDC to lead their sustainability strategy and services research.
Together, they unpack the cynical and the hopeful answer for why AI is forcing enterprise leaders to rethink energy and infrastructure. Dan explains why sustainability linked to business value operates on two axes (brand and market cap on one side, operational efficiency gains on the other), why the talent retention argument for sustainability is underappreciated, and why the measurement gap for data center energy consumption remains one of the biggest obstacles to credible sustainability commitments. He makes the case for small local models (SLMs) as a counterweight to cloud-dependent AI, argues that sustainability subject matter experts need to be physically present in data centers, and delivers a lightning round that includes one of the most important metrics enterprise leaders should understand: energy consumption per rack.
Chapter Markers:
0:00 Introduction: energy intelligence as a new operating discipline
0:43 Meet Dan Versace: from environmental science to IDC sustainability research
2:40 Where organizations are connecting sustainability to business value
3:38 Two axes: brand/market cap and operational efficiency gains
5:38 The talent retention argument for sustainability
6:29 AI, automation, and the race for sustainability unicorns
8:40 Why AI workloads are forcing a rethink of energy and infrastructure
9:22 Mega data centers, community impact, and grid resiliency
10:18 Energy security, energy inequity, and social license to operate
10:42 Tenfold the Industrial Revolution: data centers in communities
11:37 Small local models vs. cloud: a sustainability pivot point
12:12 The measurement gap: why energy data is not granular enough
14:16 Cross-functional accountability: who owns energy intelligence?
14:54 Sustainability SMEs in the data center
16:56 Lightning round: biggest misconception, energy metrics, and optimism
18:14 Where to find Dan and the United in Green podcast
Connect and Learn More:
Dan Versace: linkedin.com/in/danielversace
IDC Sustainability Research: idc.com
United in Green Podcast (sustainability + soccer): available on podcast platforms
Sheri Hinish (Supply Chain Queen): supplychainqueen.com
Subscribe to Supply Chain Revolution on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and wherever you listen.
Key Topics:
Energy intelligence, AI sustainability, data center energy consumption, AI workloads, grid resiliency, energy equity, small local models SLM, ESG, sustainability ROI, talent retention, carbon measurement, energy consumption per rack, IDC, sustainable digital transformation, community impact, cloud sustainability, embodied carbon, Dan Versace, United in Green