The emergy and exergy of genetic information and its biological carriers are evaluated. Emergy used to build and maintain biological organisms (which we suggest are the carriers of genetic information analogous to books or a communications network) was evaluated on an areal basis using average global emergy input to the biosphere. The chemical exergy of genes is calculated relative to detritus as the reference environment. Using generalized data for populations of organisms from bacteria to large mammals, an emergy-exergy ratio for genes and solar transformities of biomass are calculated.The exergy used to maintain genetic information is shown to be between about 0.1 and 1000MJ/m 2 . The emergy-exergy ratio for gene maintenance (a measure of the emergy required per Joule of genetic information is between about 1.0 and 20,000sej/J. Generalized solar transformities for organisms are calculated and vary between about 2sej/J of biomass (soil bacteria) to 75 million sej/J (mammel biomass). An interesting relationship between the emergy costs of gene maintenance and the solar transformity of biomass leads us to conclude that as the complexity of the biological carrier of information increases, the emergy costs of maintaining the carrier increases faster than the information carried.We propose that the emergy required to generate the genetic information contained in the biosphere today is enormous and we suggest that it might be on the order of 2x10 1 0 sej/J of genetic information.