Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘resources’


Above: At the former Loring Air Force base in Maine, there are hopes that a planned data center will use less water for cooling equipment by using a technique that submerges computer components in a nonconductive, oil-based fluid to draw heat directly from the source.

The rapid increase of energy-guzzling buildings for artificial intelligence has people talking about better ways to cool the systems. One idea is to build them in somewhere off Planet Earth, which sounds like a horrible idea to me. Meanwhile in Maine, developers are investigating a different approach.

Ryan Krugman writes at Inside Climate News, “Once a Cold War outpost near Maine’s northern border, the former Loring Air Force Base could soon be home to a very different kind of facility: the state’s first large-scale data center. The sprawling 450-acre site in Limestone, Maine, would host the giant server farm as part of a plan still in its early stages to reinvent part of the base as a hub for green technology.

“Since its closure in the early 1990s, the Loring Development Authority has redeveloped the base into a business park and a commercial airport. More recently, it has also become a sustainability-focused campus through the company Green 4 Maine.

“Developers say Loring’s fiber network and access to renewable hydropower make it an ideal site for a next-generation data center powered entirely by green energy and using water-free cooling technology. But questions remain over how such an energy-intensive project could impact utility rates, grid reliability and a sensitive surrounding environment.

“Traditionally, data centers, among the most power-hungry and resource-dependent buildings in the world, rely on massive cooling systems to keep thousands of servers from overheating. Some use energy-intensive fans that circulate air through vast server halls, while others depend on large volumes of water to absorb heat. ‘I wake up every morning wondering why we still use air to try and cool electronics,’ said Herb Zien, vice chair of LiquidCool Solutions, one of the developers of LiquidCool Data Center. ‘As a thermodynamics engineer, I used to use air to insulate, not cool.’

LiquidCool Solutions, a privately held company based in Rochester, Minnesota, takes a different approach to cooling electronic technology.

“Its ‘immersion cooling’ technology, Zien said, submerges computer components in a nonconductive, oil-based fluid that draws heat directly from the source — eliminating the need for fans, air conditioning or water. The system produces no toxic byproducts or emissions and, according to the company, nearly eliminates both noise and evaporative loss. Loring, company officials say, will serve as the first large-scale data center built entirely around its technology—its first real-world test. …

“The developers say [the data center] will be entirely powered by renewable energy—mainly hydroelectricity. [But] Versant Power, the region’s transmission and delivery utility, wrote in an email that … it could not verify that the supply would come from hydro or renewable sources. The utility added that grid upgrades would likely be necessary to support the project — costs that would be covered by the developers.

“A Harvard Law School Environmental and Energy Law Program study found that, while initial costs are paid for by the developers, data center projects often shift expenses onto ratepayers through discounted or tailored negotiated contracts, wholesale market charges and grid upgrades that may exceed what’s necessary for reliability.

” ‘Adding 50 megawatts to such a small, isolated grid is huge,’ said Hepeng Li, an assistant professor at the University of Maine’s College of Engineering and Computing. Northern Maine’s independent grid has a peak load of roughly 150 megawatts, meaning the data center alone could consume more than a third of the region’s total demand.

“Nearly 50 megawatts of mostly hydroelectric power — currently supplied by New Brunswick Power — is available at a nearby substation, according to Zien. New Brunswick Power told Inside Climate News that no supply agreement or memorandum of understanding is in place with either Green 4 Maine or the Loring Data Center project. …

“Developers also plan to install on-site diesel generators to provide backup power during grid outages. While standard for data centers, a diesel backup system can emit harmful air pollutants — including particulate matter, volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxides — posing potential risks to the Mi’kmaq Nation and the Aroostook National Wildlife Refuge, which border the site. …

“Project officials say generators would not be installed immediately and that some future users might choose to operate without them. …

“Those uncertainties would only grow if the project succeeds and the developers expand the data center beyond its initial 2- to 6-megawatt capacity. Even so, supporters and researchers say that if the cooling technology performs as promised and the developers can secure a reliable supply of Canadian hydropower, the project has the potential to chart a new direction for cleaner, water-free data center development.”

More at Inside Climate News, here. I admire inventors who come up with useful ideas. But I don’t know about this one. When there is money to be made, inventors often seem too sanguine about how well things will work. Imagineering combined with practicality is a consummation devoutly to be wished.

Read Full Post »

I liked this story at TreeHugger on protecting trees and fighting poverty at the same time — especially the part about the importance of women in the effort.

Sami Grover writes, “The old trope that we can either have economic development or environmental protection has been pretty much blown out of the water by this point. …

“Nowhere is this more true than the dry lands of Africa, where desertification, resource depletion, climate disruption and political unrest have all taken their toll on communities’ ability to survive and thrive. There is, however, plenty to be hopeful about too. …

Tree Aid, a charity which works with villagers living in the drylands of Africa, has long been at the forefront of this fight. By working cooperatively with villagers and on-the-ground non-profit partners in Africa, the charity doesn’t just plant trees, but rather increases villagers’ capacity to protect, nurture and utilize trees to protect their soils, increase agricultural yields, and provide a buffer against the drought, floods and failed crops that are predicted to get ever more common with the advance of climate change.

“A new free report from the charity, entitled Building Resilience to Climate Shocks, the charity is seeking to spread the word about how trees can be used to both alleviate poverty and protect the environment at the same time. …

“Previous tree planting efforts in the drylands have often failed because they’ve either focused on the wrong species of trees, or they have failed to take into account the needs, resources and skills of the local population. …

“Unless short-term needs are met, long-term needs are compromised. … Tree Aid has worked with villagers to develop alternatives to ecologically damaging land management practices:

TREE AID provides training for villagers to plan ways to make money in the short-term as well as the long. For example by producing honey from the bees which live on unburnt land and using fallen trees for fuelwood. This gives them enough income to sustain and invest in their futures and environments, as well as preparing themselves for weather extremes. …

“One of the strategies the charity uses to build climate resilience is to establish ‘Tree Banks’ within a community. These banks are essentially mixed-species tree plantings that can provide for a range of needs from fuel wood to animal fodder to fruit or other products. Each community establishes rules and management practices for when and how a Tree Bank may be used. …

“Any successful strategy for regreening these regions must work within those cultures to empower and educate women as caretakers of the environment: When women take part in decision-making there is a long-term positive impact on trees. They become important forest caretakers.”

More at Tree Aid, here ,and at Treehugger, here.

Photo: Tree Aid

 

Read Full Post »