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Forrester Research

The View from Forrester Research

Is Google powering its data centers with wind?

By | August 12, 2010, 6:23am PDT

Summary: Why is the data center lagging in its use of cleaner energy? Doug Washburn explains.

As green IT plans persist through 2010, I’m starting to receive questions from IT infrastructure and operations professionals – particularly data center managers – about the use of cleaner energy sources (e.g. wind, solar, fuel cells, hydro) to power their data center facilities. So when Google recently announced its purchase of 114 megawatts of wind power capacity for the next 20 years from a wind farm in Iowa, I got excited, hopeful of a credible example I could refer to.

But as it turns out Google will not be using this wind energy to power its data centers… yet. Even though according to Google the wind capacity is enough to power several data centers, their Senior Vice President of Operations, Urs Hoelzle, explains that, “We cannot use this energy directly, so we’re reselling it back to the grid in the regional spot market.” I confirmed this in electronic conversations with two other industry insiders, Martin LaMonica (CNET News) and Lora Kolodny (GreenTech), who also covered the announcement.

And it’s unfortunate since Google’s $600 million data center in Council Bluffs, Iowa, could likely benefit from the greener, and possible cheaper wind energy. But Iowa is a large state and it’s likely that distribution of the wind energy is an issue since the Council Bluffs data center appears to be well over a 100 miles away from their wind farms several counties away.

The situation takes me back to earlier this year when Google was cited on 60 Minutes for using the Bloom Box fuel cell to power its data centers. After some further investigation it turned out this was not actually the case. According to a Google spokesperson, “These fuel cells aren’t powering any off-site data centers… Instead, Bloom fuel cells are powering a portion of Google’s energy needs at our headquarters right here in Mountain View.” And Forrester believes this is for good reason due to potential uptime issues and higher energy costs.

So why is the data center lagging in its use of cleaner energy? In conversations with data center managers and IT vendors, I’ve found that there is still a great deal of uncertainty around:

  • Uptime and resiliency: “My data center needs power 24×7x365, not just when the sun is shining or the wind is blowing.”
  • Return on investment: “I pay $0.06 per kilowatt hour for coal – solar would be three times that, plus the capital investment of the panels.”
  • Priorities: “While reducing energy costs might make sense, my SLAs don’t include anything about increasing my use of renewable energy.”

There is a silver lining, however. While the use of cleaner energy has been slow to pick up in the data center, there are numerous high profile examples of its application in corporate campuses, skyscrapers, manufacturing facilities, and retail stores. Last year Forrester’s TechRadar on green IT 1.0 technologies assessed the use of “clean energy technologies to power the data center” and IT buyers and the vendors alike were confident that overtime clean energy will offer significant cost and environmental benefits to data center owners. But as far as I can see, 2010 isn’t going to be the breakthrough year.

* Google Energy LLC is an entity formed last December that allows Google to procure large volumes of renewable energy by participating in the wholesale market.

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Talkback Most Recent of 7 Talkback(s)

  • RE: Is Google powering its data centers with wind?
    There isn't much new here for the data center industry. Government subsidies will provide funding for other government data centers. Studies on the return on investment with the current sources have consistantly shown for years that without the subsidies there is no reason why a data center owner would invest in greener energy sources.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    GreenDCman
    12th Aug 2010
  • Rumor has it they name the green data center as 'Van Jones'
    "We will fundamentally transform this system!"

    "We will stop white people from steering poison into color communities."

    ... ...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMa3l23-rRc
    ZDNet Gravatar
    LBiege
    12th Aug 2010
  • RE: Is Google powering its data centers with wind?
    GreenDCman,

    The Government subsidies that have just come into effect here in the UK are sufficiently generous that there are now companies operating who will supply and fit a system for you for free, and you get free use of all the electricity generated that you can use...

    ... in return for THEM (rather than you) claiming the "sell back" electricity that you export back to the grid, and the separate subsidy that you get for generating and using electricity yourself.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    MarkHarrison
    12th Aug 2010
  • RE: Is Google powering its data centers with wind?
    I believe that by time 'greenergy' becomes competitive with coal/oil/gas by natural market means, it will be too late for human life on this planet. I.e., without massive government intervention, either huge subsidies for greenergy or (preferably) heavier regulation & taxation of coal/oil/gas, the market will not be able to make clean energy price-competitive before we have poisoned our atmosphere to the point of no return. I don't see that google/amazon/big data center biz et al have diddly squat to do with the issue. They are neither driving the change nor holding the country back, they are simply like all other businesses and individuals that put immediate personal (corporate) wealth ahead of the health, wellness, safety and security of the nation as a whole and their children / decendants / legacy in specific. I personally drive a car that burns gasoline, and heat my house with natural gas, and I support higher fuel taxes to push the market to green solutions. I'd rather pay more now so that my children will have a chance at a decent life than simply accept the laissez-faire selfishness that corporate America (and seemingly many if not most Americans) perpetuate. That's my $0.02.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Tivolier
    12th Aug 2010
  • We've got less than 50 years to go anyway...
    @Tivolier
    ... so why tax ourselves into oblivion? The green religion is largely based on false data, as it is designed to subjugate and control people, not "help the planet". And as I say, we'll all be gone before 2060 anyway, so why not focus on more important things while we still can?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    naibeeru
    15th Aug 2010
  • RE: Is Google powering its data centers with wind?
    The general public has NO idea how the electric grid actually works. You may buy "green power" from a wind farm that is 200 or even 1000 miles away, but the actual power delivered to your place may be coming from hydro, coal, gas, or a nuclear plant. It just means the request is transfered from company to company to a local power company who actually delivers the power to you lines by one selling power to the next one who wheel it across the nation. Each power company just charges the other the cost to move it along their lines. Your "green power" that you bought usually will stay locally to where it was produced and load is transferred region to region to deliver you extra cost power. A simplistic explaination, but close.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    TAPhilo
    12th Aug 2010
  • RE: Is Google powering its data centers with wind?
    Solar and wind energy are too costly to be useful suppliers of electricity. And, in their pricing, the greens conveniently neglect the cost of the backup generators required when the sun does not shine, or the wind does not blow. These are usually natural gas turbines, which can be turned on and off quickly, but they get no money for their off time.

    The only clean and efficient energy producer is nuclear. The spent fuel rods will be reused in future generation reactors.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jorjitop
    13th Aug 2010

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