Our new report “How Clean is Your Cloud”
is out today - to show that the massive increase in Internet use is
mainly being powered by dirty energy. Apple, Amazon and Microsoft all
score badly in the report for relying on dirty coal and dangerous
nuclear power for their data centres.
Since 2010, and again in 2011, we have been calling on all the major Internet companies to come clean about the amount and type of power behind the Internet services we use everyday.
Today Apple responded (via the New York Times):
Since 2010, and again in 2011, we have been calling on all the major Internet companies to come clean about the amount and type of power behind the Internet services we use everyday.
Today Apple responded (via the New York Times):
In a statement issued in response to the report, Apple disclosed for the first time that the data center would consume about 20 million watts at full capacity - much lower than Greenpeace's estimate, which is 100 million watts. In territory served by Duke, a million watts is enough to power 750 to 1,000 homes.Kristin Huguet, a spokeswoman for Apple, added that the company is building two large projects intended to offset energy use from the grid in North Carolina: an array of solar panels and a set of fuel cells.
While it is good to see Apple acknowledge it should reveal more
details of the energy consumption of its data centres, the information
they released today does not add up with what they have reported to be
the size of the investment and physical size of the data centre.
When Apple announced they were building a data centre in North Carolina, they announced a commitment to invest $1 Billion (USD)
over 10 years. For a number of the facilities in the “How Clean is
Your Cloud?” report, we made estimates of power demand using fairly
conservative industry benchmarks for data centre investments: 1MW of
power demand from servers for every $15 million, though the number is
often closer to $8 million for many companies. Thus, a $1 billion
investment should net Apple 66MW of computer power demand. Assuming a
fairly standard energy efficiency factor for new data centres for
non-computer energy demand of 50% gives you a 100MW data center. While
Apple is well known for making more expensive consumer products, if
Apple's plans for the $1 billion investment only generates 20MW in power
demand, that would be taking the “Apple premium” to a whole new level.
Size Matters
The size of the facility at 500,000 sq foot would also indicate a
much larger power demand. Amazon's chief web engineer recently conservatively estimated
that based just on the size of the facility, the iDatacenter would
consume at least 78MW, and speculated that it is probably higher.
We made these estimates because companies like Apple and Amazon have
not disclosed details of how much energy data centres use now and will
in the future. We provided Apple with our data
prior to releasing the “How Clean is Your Cloud?” report, and while
they did not agree with our estimate, they declined to provide specific
information on their energy demand.
While we welcome Apple's attempt today to provide more specific details on its North Carolina iData Center, it does not appear to have provided the full story, and is instead seeking to provide select pieces of information to make their dirty energy footprint seem smaller.
While we welcome Apple's attempt today to provide more specific details on its North Carolina iData Center, it does not appear to have provided the full story, and is instead seeking to provide select pieces of information to make their dirty energy footprint seem smaller.
The IT industry can be a part of the solution to old-fashioned
problems like emissions from coal. Some companies, like Google, Yahoo
and Facebook are already doing that, by taking steps to move toward
powering their clouds with clean energy, not coal or nuclear. This
campaign is creating an opportunity for Apple to join them and start
becoming a part of the solution to climate change, so that we can deal
with emissions from the growth of 'cloud computing' before it becomes an
irreversible problem. Step one in seizing this opportunity is for
companies to be transparent about their energy use
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