This free WordPress tool could save businesses billions every year by slashing the AI tokens needed to read the web — saving enough electricity to power the entire USA for 24 hours
Markdown for Agents serves simplified versions of pages to AI agents
- Clean Markdown delivery cuts AI processing waste and lowers large scale computing loads
- Global WordPress adoption could shrink billions of gigabytes of unnecessary data transfers
- Estimated energy savings rival electricity needed to briefly power the United States
A new open source WordPress plugin focuses on the growing load created by AI systems constantly crawling websites and processing pages never built for machines in the first place.
The WordPress Markdown for Agents tool, released by The Chancery Lane Project, serves simplified Markdown versions of webpages when AI agents visit, stripping out scripts, navigation elements, and other extras that machines tend to ignore anyway.
Instead of forcing AI systems to process full HTML pages packed with layout code and styling, the plugin delivers only readable content, cutting token usage and reducing computing demand when bots access supported pages.
Article continues belowWebsites are built for humans, not AI
Estimates tied to common webpage sizes and automated traffic patterns suggest the impact could scale quickly if widely adopted across WordPress installations, which account for hundreds of millions of sites globally.
Serving Markdown instead of raw HTML typically shrinks transferred data by around 80%, turning a 2.3MB page into something closer to 0.46MB once layout elements and supporting code are removed.
With conservative estimates placing automated AI visits at roughly 1,000 requests per month per site, each site could reduce transferred data by about 22GB annually when serving simplified content to supported crawlers.
Multiply that across large numbers of WordPress deployments, and total reductions climb into the range of 17.8 billion gigabytes saved each year under those same assumptions.
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Energy consumption tied to moving and processing data adds another layer to the discussion, since estimates place average electricity use for data transfer and hosting at roughly 0.81kWh per gigabyte.
Using those figures, total annual energy reductions could reach roughly 14.4 billion kilowatt-hours if adoption spread broadly across WordPress deployments, although real-world totals would naturally depend heavily on traffic patterns and adoption levels.
“If climate action scales through law, then ensuring that legal knowledge can travel effectively in an AI-driven world is essential. Most websites are built for human users, not AI, which means systems often process large amounts of irrelevant data, increasing cost and energy use," said Ben Metz, Executive Director of The Chancery Lane Project.
"For TCLP, this is about maintaining access to high-quality, climate-aligned legal content at a time when the way information is accessed is fundamentally changing. This plugin addresses that by delivering a clean, machine-readable version of content, enabling more efficient retrieval for tasks such as research, drafting, and analysis,” he added.
Early testing cited reductions of up to 90% in token usage when AI systems accessed pages via Markdown delivery rather than full webpage rendering.
“Improving the efficiency of digital systems is not just a technical concern. It has real environmental implications,” said Felix Cohen, the company's Director of Digital.
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Wayne Williams is a freelancer writing news for TechRadar Pro. He has been writing about computers, technology, and the web for 30 years. In that time he wrote for most of the UK’s PC magazines, and launched, edited and published a number of them too.
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