An IBM computer center in Germany reduces its energy-consumption with a water-cooling system attached on top and helps heat the surrounding area.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

Data centers are large facilities filled with servers and other equipment. In the United States, data centers are responsible for more than 2% of the country's electricity usage, according to researchers at Villanova University. If the global cloud computing industry were considered to be a single country, it would be the fifth-largest in the world in terms of energy consumption, according to Ed Turkel of Hewlett-Packard's (HPQ, Fortune 500) Hyperscale Business Unit.

Nearly half of the energy data centers consume goes to cooling the equipment using fans and other methods. That's "just wasteful," said Jill Simmons, director of Seattle's Office of Sustainability and Environment.

That's why the city of Seattle is working on a project to make use of the heat data centers produce. The city plans to route heat from two local data centers to to help warm 10 million square feet of building space in the surrounding area. The project is still in the conceptual phase, but Simmons said the city hopes to have it in motion "within the next year."

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The plan is to take the water that cools the data center and pipe it out to buildings nearby. The system will also rely on water heated by energy from sewer lines and electrical substations.

The construction cost will be borne by private utility Corix, which will recover its investment through rates paid by customers over a 30-year period.

"Our hope is that the rates will be competitive with the rates of other utilities, and hopefully better over time," said Christie Baumel, energy policy advisor at Seattle's Office of Sustainability and Environment.

Seattle is following the lead of other cities around the world, including Munich and Vancouver, small portions of which also use heat from data centers.

See the article here:
How data centers are heating Seattle

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April 8, 2014 at 3:42 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Heating and Cooling - Install