July-August 2009

Data Centers and DG

IT facilities, which are making great strides in improving energy efficiency, are a natural fit for onsite power generation.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo:Sun Microsystems

Additional Article Content

By Don Talend

Comments

Address one environmental challenge and sometimes another materializes. The e-communications revolution that has occurred over the past decade-plus has saved innumerable trees and reduced burdens on landfills and recycling facilities, in addition to exponentially improving the efficiency of information flow. But as technology applications such as Web hosting, financial transactions, and medical record storage continue to increase the need for electronic processing, storage, and networking equipment, energy demand to power it has increased exponentially.

The EPA estimates that data centers consumed 1.5% of the nation’s power, or 61 billion kWh, in 2006, and these facilities’ share will be expected to have roughly tripled by the end of the decade. EPA also estimated that the amount of power consumed by these facilities in 2006 was double the amount in 2000, and that if current efficiency trends continued, total data center power consumption would reach about 100 billion kWh by 2011. The US Congress has taken note: Public Law 109-431 required EPA to conduct a study of the rapid growth of energy consumption in data centers and recommend actions to reduce their energy consumption. An August 2007 EPA report to Congress provided several recommendations for improved operation, best practices, and the state of the art. Some of the recommendations relating to power and cooling include improvements in fans, chillers, and pumps, and the use of free cooling and combined heat and power (CHP).

Several large technology corporations have followed suit and made energy efficiency improvements in their data centers, including Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Google, and Sun Microsystems. Just as significantly, the information technology (IT) industry has developed its own metric for data center power consumption. The Green Grid, an association of IT professionals focusing on the energy efficiency of data centers, proposed the use of Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE), or total power consumption divided by IT equipment power consumption, and the metric has been widely adopted by the IT industry.

Recently, three companies have successfully reduced their data center power consumption using this metric and EPA and industry recommendations. These projects bode well for the future of distributed generation (DG) in general.

Photo: NetApp
Interior view of a louver wall at the new NetApp facility, which is used to bring outside air into the facility for cooling.
Sun Microsystems
A recent move by Sun Microsystems to combine two data centers into one in Broomfield, CO, will save the company 1 million kWh of electricity per month and an estimated $1 million in energy costs annually. Design strategies, in the largest data center consolidation project undertaken in the company’s history, included minimizing the raised floor space and optimizing chilled-air distribution. The Santa Clara, CA–based company opened the facility in January 2009 and reduced total floor space by about 75%, eliminated $4 million in costs with the raised-floor reduction, saved more than $1 million in electrical costs, reduced its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 11,000 metric tons per year, and is expected to cut its corporate carbon footprint by 6%.

The facility is the company’s fourth to use a new energy-efficient design, following in the footsteps of data centers in Santa Clara; Blackwater, UK; and Bangalore, India. The Santa Clara facility, which opened in August 2007, was compressed from 200,000 to 80,000 square feet—at a $1-million savings and yielding a PUE of 1.28. Mark Monroe, director of sustainable computing for Sun Microsystems, acknowledges that the company saw an opportunity for cost savings in the wake of the other facilities’ construction and the 2005 acquisition of server storage device provider Storage Technology (StorageTek).

Advertisement

Monroe reports that Sun had spent about $250 million over the previous four years for an initiative to reduce the company’s data center floor space by about one-third. The primary motivation for modifying the acquired StorageTek facility in nearby Louisville, CO, was cost savings, with sustainability emerging in conjunction, Monroe says. “I like to say that we’re pragmatic ecologists, and I think in every for-profit company you’ll find will say the same thing,” he says. “Here in Colorado, we get our power from two coal-fired power plants just down the street. That 11,000 metric-tons [CO2 reduction] is about 5% of our global carbon footprint, and about 6% of our US carbon footprint.”

The Broomfield consolidation is part of a larger Sun initiative to achieve a 60% data center square footage compression globally. This initiative has included a 30% decrease in data center operating expenses in the Bay Area alone since 2007. In October 2008, Sun announced that it had reduced greenhouse gas emissions from US operations by 23%, surpassing its goal five years early; the company is now attempting to reduce its emissions by another 20%, with projects like Broomfield. Using its experience in improving energy in its own data centers, Sun recently launched its own design service for these facilities. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Distributed Energy Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Distributed Energy email newsletter!