Posted in

A milestone achievement in our journey to carbon negative

Microsoft matched 100% of its annual electricity with renewable energy by 2025, contracting 40 GW across 26 countries. The program brought 19 GW online so far, cut Scope 2 emissions, mobilized private investment, scaled repeatable procurement models, and delivered community-focused co-benefits.

Microsoft has announced it matched 100% of its annual global electricity consumption with renewable energy. This milestone advances its 2020 commitment to become carbon negative by 2030.

Main feature and impact

Microsoft contracted 40 gigawatts of new renewable energy across 26 countries. Nineteen gigawatts are operational, with the remainder coming online within five years. This procurement reduced reported Scope 2 emissions by an estimated 25 million tons. The portfolio mobilized private investment and supported grid-scale supply expansion in regions where Microsoft operates.

Practical implications

The procurement created bankable, repeatable procurement models for corporate buyers. Microsoft worked with over 95 utilities and developers across 400+ contracts. Deals include PPAs, virtual PPAs, and multi-technology offtakes. Outcomes include lower transaction costs, expanded developer financing access, and demonstrated pathways to scale clean energy deployment globally.
“become carbon negative by 2030”
Microsoft’s milestone signals stronger corporate demand for clean power and infrastructure. Expect continued investment in multi-technology solutions, grid-enabling assets, and market-specific contracting. Companies should evaluate procurement strategies, community benefits, and partnerships to unlock similar scale and impact.

Key points from the article:

  • Matched 100% annual electricity consumption with renewables by 2025.
  • Contracted 40 GW of new renewable capacity across 26 countries.
  • 19 GW online now; remaining capacity to come online within five years.
  • Procurement reduced reported Scope 2 emissions by about 25 million tons.
  • Long-term PPAs mobilized private investment, supply chains, and local jobs.
  • Related Coverage:

    From the The Official Microsoft Blog