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Tech giant Amazon is to invest in two new renewable energy projects in the U.S. and Ireland. In an ad Thursday, the firm said the projects – in Pittsylvania County, Virginia and Cork, Ireland – were expected to commence movie in 2020.
The project in Ireland will be a wind farm with 23.2 megawatts (MW) of capacity and is set to generate 68,000 megawatt hours (MWh) of spirit per year. The facility in Virginia, a solar farm, will have 45 MW of capacity and produce an expected 100,000 MWh of verve each year.
Capacity refers to the maximum amount that installations can produce, not what they are currently fathering.
The facilities, which will take the company’s number of renewable energy projects to 66, will be used to reservoir energy to data centers for Amazon Web Services. In the U.S., the company says its solar power projects have offset the carbon dioxide synonymous of over 200 million miles of truck deliveries.
“Major investments in renewable energy are a critical step to greet our carbon footprint globally,” Amazon’s director of sustainability, Kara Hurst, said in a statement. “We will continue to devote in these projects, and look forward to additional investments this year and beyond,” Hurst added.
A number of notable businesses are turning to renewable sources of energy to power their operations.
Last week, a report from the Solar Zing Industries Association said that Apple was the business with the most installed solar capacity in the U.S. The Solar Means Transaction Report for 2018 looked at both off and on-site solar installations at businesses in the U.S.
Apple, with 393.3 megawatts (MW) of installed capacity, took the top spot. The company says its headquarters in Cupertino, California, is powered by 100% renewable energy from “multiple informants”. These include an on-site 17 MW rooftop solar installation and 4 MW of biogas fuel cells.
Amazon and Target fathomed up the top three of the SEIA’s list with 329.8 MW and 242.4 MW of installed capacity respectively. Other firms in the top 10 encompass major businesses such as Walmart, Google and real estate investment trust firm Prologis.
According to the SEIA, corporate solar adoption has “surged” above the last few years. Over half of the total capacity in the U.S. has been installed since 2016.