Not as bad as feared. And I’m an environmentalist.



Cloud Computing Is Not the Energy Hog That Had Been Feared

The digital services churned out by the world’s computer centers are 
multiplying, but their energy use is not, thanks to cloud computing, a new 
study says.
   
   - Share on Facebook
   - Share on WhatsApp
   - Post on Twitter
   - Mail
ImageMajd Bakar, a Google vice president. The largest cloud data centers are 
owned and operated by big tech companies like Google.Credit...Josh 
Edelson/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Steve Lohr
Feb. 27, 2020
The computer engine rooms that power the digital economy have become 
surprisingly energy efficient.

A new study of data centers globally found that while their computing output 
jumped sixfold from 2010 to 2018, their energy consumption rose only 6 percent. 
The scientists’ findings suggest concerns that the rise of mammoth data centers 
would generate a surge in electricity demand and pollution have been greatly 
overstated.

The major force behind the improving efficiency is the shift to cloud 
computing. In the cloud model, businesses and individuals consume computing 
over the internet as services, from raw calculation and data storage to search 
and social networks.

The largest cloud data centers, sometimes the size of football fields, are 
owned and operated by big tech companies like Google, Microsoft, Amazon and 
Facebook.

Each of these sprawling digital factories, housing hundreds of thousands of 
computers, rack upon rack, is an energy-hungry behemoth. Some have been built 
near the Arctic for natural cooling and others beside huge hydroelectric plants 
in the Pacific Northwest.




Still, they are the standard setters in terms of the amount of electricity 
needed for a computing task. “The public thinks these massive data centers are 
energy bad guys,” said Eric Masanet, the lead author of the study. “But those 
data centers are the most efficient in the world.”

The study findings were published on Thursday in an article in the journal 
Science. It was a collaboration of five scientists at Northwestern University, 
the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and an independent research firm. The 
project was funded by the Department of Energy and by a grant from a 
Northwestern alumnus who is an environmental philanthropist.

The new research is a stark contrast to often-cited predictions that energy 
consumption in the world’s data centers is on a runaway path, perhaps set to 
triple or more over the next decade. Those worrying projections, the study 
authors say, are simplistic extrapolations and what-if scenarios that focus 
mainly on the rising demand for data center computing.

By contrast, the new research is a bottom-up analysis that compiles information 
on data center processors, storage, software, networking and cooling from a 
range of sources to estimate actual electricity use. Enormous efficiency 
improvements, they conclude, have allowed computing output to increase sharply 
while power consumption has been essentially flat.




“We’re hopeful that this research will reset people’s intuitions about data 
centers and energy use,” said Jonathan Koomey, a former scientist at the 
Berkeley lab who is an independent researcher.

Over the years, data center electricity consumption has been a story of 
economic incentives and technology advances combining to tackle a problem.

>From 2000 to 2005, energy use in computer centers doubled. In 2007, the 
>Environmental Protection Agency forecast another doubling of power consumed by 
>data centers from 2005 to 2010.

In 2011, at the request of The New York Times, Mr. Koomey made an assessment of 
how much data center electricity consumption actually did increase between 2005 
and 2010. He estimated the global increase at 56 percent, far less than 
previously expected. The recession after the 2008 financial crisis played a 
role, but so did gains in efficiency. The new study, with added data, lowered 
that 2005 to 2010 estimate further.




But the big improvements have come in recent years. Since 2010, the study 
authors write in Science, “the data center landscape has changed dramatically.”

The tectonic shift has been to the cloud. In 2010, the researchers estimated 
that 79 percent of data center computing was done in smaller traditional 
computer centers, largely owned and run by non-tech companies. By 2018, 89 
percent of data center computing took place in larger, utility-style cloud data 
centers.

The big cloud data centers use tailored chips, high-density storage, so-called 
virtual-machine software, ultrafast networking and customized airflow systems — 
all to increase computing firepower with the least electricity.

“The big tech companies eke out every bit of efficiency for every dollar they 
spend,” said Mr. Masanet, who left Northwestern last month to join the faculty 
of the University of California, Santa Barbara.




Google is at the forefront. Its data centers on average generate seven times 
more computing power than they did just five years ago, using no more 
electricity, according to Urs Hölzle, a senior vice president who oversees 
Google’s data center technology.

In 2018, data centers consumed about 1 percent of the world’s electricity 
output. That is the energy-consumption equivalent of 17 million American 
households, a sizable amount of energy use — but barely growing.

The trend of efficiency gains largely offsetting rising demand should hold for 
three or four years, the researchers conclude. But beyond a few years, they 
say, the outlook is uncertain.

In the Science article, they recommend steps including more investment in 
energy-saving research and improved measurement and information sharing by data 
center operators worldwide.




The next few years, they write, will be “a critical transition phase to ensure 
a low-carbon and energy-efficient future.”


Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone


On Saturday, February 11, 2023, 11:25 AM, Dave Jones <d...@vsoft-software.com> 
wrote:

All good questions, Paul. And you are correct about the URL, too, thanks for 
fixing that.
The article does claim that data centres (sp?) could take up 27% of the [Irish] 
national electricity output by 2029.
DJ

----------------------------------------------------------------------
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email to lists...@listserv.ua.edu with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN




----------------------------------------------------------------------
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email to lists...@listserv.ua.edu with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN

Reply via email to