This is a dangerous fantasy. Everything we know about the de-carbonation of the grid suggests that conservation is a key strategy for the next decades. There is no credible scenario towards 100% renewables. Storage is insanely expensive and green load smoothing capacity such as hydro and biomass is naturally limited. So a substantial part of the production when renewables drop will be handled by natural gas, which seem to have equivalent emissions similar to coal when you factor in the lost methane, fracked methane in particular.
In addition, even 100% renewable would be attainable, that would still require massive infrastructure investment, resource use and associated emissions, since most of the corresponding industries, such as concrete and steel production, aluminum and copper ore mining and refining etc. are very far from net zero and will stay that way for decades.
To throw into this planet-sized bonfire a large uninterruptible consumer, whose standby capital depreciation on things like state of the art datacenters far exceeds the cost most industries are willing to pay for energy, all predicated on the idea that "demand spurs renewable investments", is frankly idiotic.
Sure there is, Nuclear is zero emission and renewable and powers 70% of the French electric grid. Uranium in the oceans is thought to regenerate itself but even if that turned out to not be true, should be good for at least a few hundred thousand years. It would require a massive infrastructure investment so now would be a good time to get started.
In addition, even 100% renewable would be attainable, that would still require massive infrastructure investment, resource use and associated emissions, since most of the corresponding industries, such as concrete and steel production, aluminum and copper ore mining and refining etc. are very far from net zero and will stay that way for decades.
To throw into this planet-sized bonfire a large uninterruptible consumer, whose standby capital depreciation on things like state of the art datacenters far exceeds the cost most industries are willing to pay for energy, all predicated on the idea that "demand spurs renewable investments", is frankly idiotic.