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HP is worried about nocturnal emissions

Slams Dell over carbon offsetting
Tuesday, 18 March 2008, 07:17

HP SAYS THE WAY to cut carbon emissions in data centres is to "follow the moon".

This is apparently a method of shifting data centre use to wherever it is night time on the planet. During the hours of dark electricity is cheaper, though it is unclear how this saves power. An HP rep also said that carbon offsetting was a waste of time.

"Dell, at one end says it has energy-efficient servers and at the other end it plants a tree for every server it sells. There isn't enough space in the world to plant enough trees to offset the power used by a server."

It will be one to two years before anyone comes up with proper measurable benchmarks on power use and carbon emissions from data centres and IT in general.

It's all lunacy whichever way you look at it. µ

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Comments
Speaking of lunacy...

...or should we say collective hysteria... It's really depressing to see how "carbon" seems to have become a bad word. Are people forgetting that life on Earth is cabon-based? A little teaser: http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/monckton/goreerrors.html And a free bonus: http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/sppi_originals/fallacies_about_global_warming.html

posted by : Bernard, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
Cooling

One of the big costs for a data center is cooling. At night it's most often cooler, and there is no sun load to fight so cooling costs should be quite a bit lower. That would cut power use, not just cut costs. On the down side you would need more data centers.

posted by : Tom, 19 December 2007Complain about this comment
Darker == colder

Perhaps they mean when it's darker it's colder, so cooling costs are lower?

posted by : Ian M, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
Isn't the point that

at night much of the energy produced by power plants isn't used? So by shifting servers to running only at night time, you mop up wasted energy and lower the overall requirement for energy during the day time. Could be wrong.

posted by : Benji, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
Pfft!

Trees do not offset CO2, for whatever amount of CO2 they convert to O2 during the day, is released overnight. Moreover, when they die, they release the CO2 that it absorbed from the soil. Perhaps environmentalists should go back to their elementary school books and review the CO2 cycle.

posted by : Augustine, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
Silly marketeers

"though it is unclear how this saves power." Well, everyone knows money = power, right? I mean, it's clear the same server would consume exactly as much power (not power brokers though) at any time of day. Though maybe less heating/cooling for the pawns of the powered running the installations?

posted by : James, 19 December 2007Complain about this comment
What?

Something like 75%+ of the worlds oxygen comes from the ocean, how does planting trees really help? Ever though cheaper electricity at night is a good idea, you're still emiting carbon.

posted by : NitOxYs, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
@pfft

You had better learn to read a little biology. Trees do indeed sequester CO2, and measurements (from experiments, familiar with the concept?) show that they don't release nearly all the CO2 they gathered in the day. If they did, they wouldn't get bigger... To further the explanation, had you ever encountered a dead tree, you would discover you would run into it and hurt yourself, as they don't instantly disintegrate into gaseous components.

posted by : cutis rendon, 20 December 2007Complain about this comment
They are talking about baseload power

There are different types of power stations, those that are considered base load and those that are considered peak. The base load generators are stuff like nuclear or coal plants which are very inefficient to start up and shut down and thus are kept running 24x7. The peak load power stations, which are typically natural gas or oil fired, cover the difference between the lowest demand points and the highest by varying their power production. So if you move your demand to the baseload hours, you: 1) avoid running during the hottest part of the day where the cooling demand for the datacenter is the highest 2) move your load from natural gas or oil fired power stations to nuclear or coal (depending on the CO2 output of the specific coal, natural gas or oil fired generators in question, this may or may not help, but it would definitely help if they covered the base load by adding nuclear plants) 3) by avoiding additional peak load, you avoid or delay the construction of new peak load power plants, and the construction process with all the equipment, people, materials, etc. is probably responsible for a lot of CO2 in its own right

posted by : Doug, 18 March 2008Complain about this comment
"Follow the Moon?"

Sorry for the pedantry, but the moon is up during the day as much time as it is at night. Sounds like a bug in the timing routine. That or they're taking advantage of tidal effect on hydroelectric systems....

posted by : Ric Werme, 19 March 2008Complain about this comment
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