Data centres: Are they unwanted but necessary guests in our landscape?
They have become somewhat of an unwanted guest in some quarters in Ireland in recent years, akin to the perception of a foreign millionaire deciding to decamp to Ireland and making it home, telling locals how to do things, enjoying all the spoils, but not really contributing to their communities.
Big data centres are seen as usurpers of Irish land, taking up massive spaces but giving little back, leeching off the electricity grid and pumping little back into the community.
Is the picture that simple? Are they indeed faceless, joyless entities that take, take, take without providing any give?
Or are they an essential part of modern life, allowing us to keep up with instant information in an increasingly instant information age, and something we will come to accept?
Prof Brian Norton: ‘It is not just data that people produce, but it is data that the machinery around us automatically produces and shares. There is a huge amount of that.’ Picture: Energy Ireland
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asked the head of energy research, with direct responsibility for the International Energy Research Centre (IERC), at Tyndall National Institute in Cork, to give an overview.Professor Brian Norton, who is world-renowned in the field of energy research and is a former president of Dublin Institute of Technology, said a data centre is essentially just that, a centre where data is stored, managed, and processed.
“You know when people talk about the thing being in the cloud, from a computer perspective — the cloud is the big floppy thing in the sky, coming from a big thing called a data centre,” Prof Norton said.
“They are huge things, there are 2bn sq ft of them in the world, or slightly more. There are about eight million data centres, so they are big and they are abundant.”
It is no exaggeration to say they are ubiquitous, and needed if we are to continue the technological revolution, said Prof Norton.
“They are storing and processing — everything from that to online purchases to everything consumable.”
They are distributed globally for lots of reasons, according to Prof Norton. One is for security, he said.
“Obviously the connections want to be close to the data, but also there is varied legislation around various jurisdictions, on data being stored in that jurisdiction, for reasons of privacy, GDPR regulations, etc.”
These centres process so much essential data, that the society we have been hurtled into in recent years would not be so progressive in technological terms without them, Prof Norton said.
“The big thing, surprisingly, is not so much the data that people produce, but increasingly lots of our kit is connected by what is called the internet of things (IoT)
“Devices are connected to each other automatically, so you can think about things such as condition monitoring in modern motorcars, for example. It directly connects the internet itself and tells the company or the dealer how things are performing.
“The gas turbines, the jet engines in aircraft are always talking to the aircraft manufacturer, telling them how they are doing, for example.
“That kind of information, called the IoT, is a huge amount of data sharing. It is not just data that people produce, but it is data that the machinery around us automatically produces and shares. There is a huge amount of that.”
There are about 75bn devices directly connected to the internet, that are sharing information over the internet without human intervention, according to Prof Norton.
“The very computers we are talking on are sending stuff backwards and forwards all the time, without our intervention, in terms of the background noise and the information about the updating of software, etc. It is a huge, huge thing.
“All that data needs a lot of energy to feed it,” he said.
According to data from November 2020, there are 66 data centres now operational in Ireland.
Pro-data industry organisation Host In Ireland’s report on the industry, conducted in association with Bitpower Energy Solutions, said that of the 66 data centres, 31 of these are directly operated by the hyperscalers, which make up 80% of the capacity.
Five are leased wholesale data centres, 15 are colocation data centres, and the remaining 15 are smaller private data centres operated by telcos and small providers.
The total design power capacity of all 66 data centres is 834 MW, according to Bitpower chief executive David McAuley.
“We estimate this is 630 MW of IT capacity running at 55% utilisation. Note also that completed data centres may take a number of years to reach full occupancy,” he said in the report.
The report estimates construction spend will have amounted to €1.25bn in 2020.
“We expect this to increase to €1.5bn in 2021 and in 2022. In total, the pipeline amounts to €6.7bn in new construction in the five years from 2021 to 2025. This compares to a similar amount of investment in data centre construction over the previous 10 years. The pace of investment will double,” Mr McAuley said.
President and founder of Host In Ireland Garry Connolly was at pains to point out in the report that while exports fell across many traditionally strong industry sectors in Ireland due to the Covid-19 pandemic, IT remained robust.
“To break it down, €117bn of the total €448bn of Irish goods and services exports is due to computer services, accounting for just over one quarter (26%) of Ireland’s export activity. While exports fell dramatically for the vast majority of sectors (transport, tourism, retail to name a few), computer services, pharmaceuticals, and medicinal products have had strong enough performances to buoy the Irish economy as a whole,” he said.
Ireland has the potential to generate 9.2 gigawatts of renewable electricity by 2030, far more than needed for Irish consumption, Mr Connolly said.
He pointed to the Irish Academy of Engineering’s recent report on the ‘Future of Electricity Transmission in Ireland’, which said “one could indeed argue that there is little point in constructing large amounts of renewable generation in Ireland and then exporting its output at exceptionally low prices.“Official CSO and SEAI import/export data for 2019 indicates that the price of Irish electricity exports, which take place predominantly when wind generation is high, is less than 50% of the price paid to wind generators for that output under the REFIT regime,” the Irish Academy of Engineering report states.REFIT is designed to ensure Ireland meets its goal of 40% of electricity coming from renewable sources by 2020.Mr Connolly echoed the sentiments. “As we see with other natural resources, the value-add of a data service is greater than the renewable electricity alone. Add to that, the infrastructure to move data already exists whereas the infrastructure to move the electricity does not.“It continues to be an exciting time for the data centre industry. The work being carried out is having a real impact on our lives every day. While much in the future remains uncertain, I am optimistic that an abundance of opportunities still lay ahead for Ireland and its digital economy.”Political reaction to data centres
Lynn Boylan: ‘Despite the best efforts of tech giants to greenwash the impact they are having, the figures do not lie.’ File picture: Gareth Chaney
Sceptics want clear and incontrovertible evidence that data centres are a good thing for Ireland as a whole, and they have not been persuaded so far.
Sinn Féin senator Lynn Boylan told the Seanad in December that the public perception of data centres was one of worry and scepticism.
“I am here to raise the deeply concerning proliferation of data centres in the country. It seems they are now a new frontier for extraction where our cool climate and windy hillsides are ripe for the taking. We know that data centres are popping up all over the country and with them comes windfarms and fossil fuel energy generators.”
There was so-called greenwashing at play, she said, referring to the practice of appearing more climate-friendly than the reality.
“Despite the best efforts of tech giants to greenwash the impact they are having, the figures do not lie. The surge in Irish data centres comes with a massive carbon footprint. They pretend that big tech is a clean industry but it requires a huge amount of energy to power the servers and fans to suck in cool air. Each video on file on the internet has to be stored in these data centres.”
By 2027, data centres will consume 31% of Ireland’s electricity, Ms Boylan said.
“Across Europe, while energy use is decreasing, in Ireland we are an anomaly because it is increasing. That has nothing to do with our household or population growth. It is purely down to the rise in the number of data centres. They will require 12.5 TW [terawatts] of electricity above what is being provided. That is enough power for 24m homes.”
These data centres should be treated like the carbon-intensive industry that they are, Ms Boylan said.
“It seems there is a greenwashing campaign in full spin because we hear that data centres will be 100% powered by renewables. However, the amount of energy projected to come from their windfarms is far outstripped by the demand from these data centres.
“On top of that, each megawatt of wind capacity must be backed up with energy generated from fossil fuels. This is not to mention the fallout of the biodiversity disaster in the Meenbog windfarm, which has a contract with Amazon. While pilot projects in which waste energy is sold to heat homes or public buildings are welcome, they barely put a dent in emissions.”
Big data has been given a “free pass” by the Government, Ms Boylan claimed.
“When we hear talk of the cloud, it is as though it has no material impact but the truth is it is bad for climate and to date, the Government has given the industry a free pass while the public is left to carry the bulk of the massive cost for the infrastructure required to run these data centres.
“The Irish Academy of Engineering estimates that we will need €9bn of new infrastructure. It seems the Government strategy has been so successful in attracting data centres that we now have an enormous and disproportionate amount of western Europe’s data infrastructure, and with that comes these colossal CO2 emissions.”
Community Development Minister Joe O’Brien said while data centres can consume very large amounts of energy, they have a flat and predictable demand profile.
That means they use the same amount of electricity day and night, therefore requiring a range of generation technologies to meet demand, he said.
“Data centres have, until recent years, accounted for less than 2% of Ireland’s total electricity demand. EirGrid, in its generation capacity statement for 2019 to 2028, projects that demand from data centres could account for 29% of all demand by 2028.
“Significant increases in volumes of generation capacity, including from renewable energy resources, will be required to meet Ireland’s electrification objectives and demand from heat pumps, electric vehicles, and data centres. The climate action plan set an ambition of 70% renewable electricity by 2030, the majority of which will be met through the renewable electricity support scheme, RESS.
“When data centre operators purchase electricity directly from renewable generators, it contributes to the State’s objective to decarbonise our electricity system without any subsidy from electricity customers,” he said.
In February, Independent TD Denis Naughten said families must not carry the can for big data, and that the bigger picture of what is needed for households was going unpainted.
“As a result of the pandemic, families’ heating bills have gone up dramatically and that has been compounded by increased carbon taxes and the subsidising of data centres,” said Mr Naughten.
“There was a 9% increase in residential carbon emissions during the 2020 lockdown and we have seen a fall-off in the retrofitting of homes, which commenced in 2019 and collapsed in 2020. We need a step-change in retrofitting homes and that needs to be prioritised as part of the capital plan.”
Mr Naughten’s comments echoed Labour TD Duncan Smith’s scepticism, which he raised around the same time Ms Boylan raised her concerns in December.
Mr Smith said big industry collaborating together would be the big winners, not the average citizen.
“The renewable energy that is coming on stream will not be State-owned. It will be privatised so we will be going from big oil to big wind — I hope we can find another phrase. This is where we are going.
“The Government needs to tell us how much of the renewable energy coming on stream will be siphoned off for other multinational corporations such as those running data centres that are entering into prepaid contracts with companies that own windfarms to siphon off up to 15%, 20%, or 25% of the energy created in order to power data centres, which are huge carbon emitters and very poor in terms of creating jobs.
“There is a structure here that will only get bigger and will be bad for the worker, the economy, and the Irish taxpayer because we will continue to pay these exorbitant penalties to countries that are doing things far better than us.”
Environment Minister Eamon Ryan: Data centres are here to stay.
Environment Minister Eamon Ryan has moved to assuage critics by saying the Government would be cognisant of all stakeholders.
However, data centres are here to stay, he added.
“We will probably take a combination of various approaches, but one of the things we will ensure is that demand, be it from data centres or other large energy users, is planned in a way that lowers the cost, minimises emissions, and ensures we have a fully sustainable system.
“That may involve locating data centres close to where the power is, or restricting in certain areas where the grid cannot cope with the addition. However, it will not say no to data centres because we need them as part of the wider economy.”
Why have data centres become a major presence in Ireland in recent years? Geography and happenstance mostly, according to Prof Brian Norton from the Tyndall.
“There are lots of reasons why data centres are near us. They command a whole lot of different dimensions. One is that Ireland is not a bad climate for data centres, because there is a huge coolant. You don’t want to put them in hot places because there is a bigger cooling load. Places like Ireland are good locations.
“Also, you do want data centres that are proximate to where the network nodes are, and Ireland has lines coming across the Atlantic and lines going to the UK and Europe. If you think about the physical geography of the Earth, you’ve got certain points where major cables land, and there are natural nodes.
“You expect to see big data centres on the coasts of the US, you expect to see them on the coasts of Europe, because of the cables going under the sea that turn up in those places. They are the physical, geographical, climatic reasons — there are natural geographies and climates of the world that you want to put things in,” he said.
It is a coincidence of facts such as geography and climate, according to Prof Norton.
“You don’t want them in hot climates because it just increases the cooling load and it has to do with legislation and oversight of rights to privacy and what is done with your data. It is a combination of all those facts.
“The other reason is the sanctity and security of the data itself, and more importantly, the operations on that data. For example, in Europe, there are legitimate concerns about privacy, what people have when it comes to their rights.
“Similar privacy laws would not exist in the US and they would not exist in China. From a legislative perspective, the ability to take action if you feel your data has been misused is obviously limited outside the jurisdiction. For those reasons, people like things to be stored locally.”
While data centres consume and create lots of energy and waste, the ever-burgeoning field of renewable solutions can play a major role in mitigation, he said, adding that that that needs imagination and invention.
“Most of that energy in a data centre typically is used for the IT equipment, the servers that are in the data centres, and about half of it is to do with cooling systems one way or another around those, that is how the energy ends up being used within. All of that ends up being released as very, very low-grade heat. It is lukewarm air, essentially.
When people see data centres returning the favour on a mass scale, hearts and minds should be less sceptical, according to Prof Norton. “To be fair, a lot of people who run data centres are committed to running them 100% renewably. That will happen because of the decarbonisation of electricity anyway, but nevertheless, they are committed to that.
“But you’ve got to remember that data centres produce a huge amount of waste heat, and you do see various projects around the world of taking it into greenhouses, so you look at food production — in other words, using that heat in various processes.
“Drying things for food preservation is another, for example. Or industrial processes that have a drying component associated with them. Co-locating them then would provide employment and added value.”
Distributing that excess energy into communities would assist in the transition to a new renewable and sustainable economy in rural regions, Prof Norton said.
“Thinking a bit more holistically, and thinking of data centres as part of an ecosystem in particular locations, so that you are looking at distributed production of rural energy locally and distributed use of the huge amounts of waste heat that data centres produce.”
Earning public trust is vital if data centres are to be accepted, according to Prof Brian Norton.
“Planning comes into wider issues of public trust. Who bears the cost in terms of the impact of data centres, as opposed to the cost of money? Who benefits? I think one of the challenges with planning law generally, but in Ireland in particular, is that someone might object to a big local data centre because they cannot see the benefit to them because it accrues to someone else.”
Part of the issue with all these things is being able to articulate and genuinely show an actual benefit to the people who are going to have to bear the things, according to Prof Norton.
“That is the root problem with that. In some jurisdictions, the public policy debate outside of the particular project is much more mature and advanced, and the understanding happens. There are lots of examples of this — in Denmark, if you take wind energy, they have had a planning regime which would designate sites where you could do projects with wind energy, and then you apply to build the thing on those sites.”
Ireland has done it the other way around, he said. “Rather than having to go and seek permission for a particular place, there is a public policy debate outside of any particular promoter or any particular technology. In other words, we have got to have these things, where shall we put them? Whereas in Ireland, it is done the opposite way around — someone has to prove their case and then objections come.
“In the likes of Denmark, It still has a lot of debate, it still has a lot of the exact same voices, but the decision has been made at a large-scale level — this is where we are going to do these things, these are the areas where we are not, and then people who are building data centres or windfarms know where they stand.”
The dotting of the landscape — or blotting, considering their size and scale — of data centres is similar to when Ireland was in the throes of electrification, according to Prof Norton.
“It is interesting in Ireland, for example, electrification in the past was seen as a sign of progress and people would have bought into pylons as a sign of advancement. You are now seeing that progress has happened, you are seeing electrification that is about transmitting energy from the west where you have lots of wind and wave energy, to the east where the population is, and the people in the middle are not seeing any benefit to themselves. You can see some of the tensions that arise from that.
“There are ways of solving this problem. There are actual benefits accruing to those people, and systems must be designed so they see those benefits.
“There are industries that obviously work around data centres; there is a whole software sector, there is a whole design sector — those people doing that kind of work might be in the centre of cities. The internet is ubiquitous, so could more of those jobs be in rural areas?
“You could be providing rural employment on a distributed basis. Although working from home in its present guise has a whole range of issues attached to it, it has demonstrated that people can indeed do so. It may not have to be the case to have one part somewhere and another part somewhere else, when it comes to the benefits.”
Ireland has proved itself capable of getting the balance right in the past, he said.
“That does need a good strong national broadband to do that, for example, but that is the sort of investment you need to get that sense of equity that is necessary.
“I don’t think it is the planning process at fault, it is the public equity discussion underpinning that which can be the challenge.”
‘It demands a resilient power system capable of absorbing and storing fluctuations in weather-driven generation.’
One thing everyone agrees on is that Ireland’s electricity system will have to become more robust to handle the surge in demand over the coming decades, as well as reducing emissions.
Powering data centres is merely one part of the jigsaw, according to a report from experts at Cork-based MaREI — SFI Research Centre for Energy, Climate and Marine Research, in conjunction with the Electricity Association of Ireland.
Laura Mehigan and Dr Paul Deane, in their summary, state that a decarbonised, all-island electricity system is key to achieving climate ambition on the island of Ireland.
“This study takes a closer look at the future all-island power system through the lens of decarbonisation by focusing on the year 2030, where over 70% of the annual electricity on the system will be renewable.
Laura Mehigan, who says in a major report that a decarbonised all-island electricity system is key to achieving climate ambition on the island of Ireland.
“While this requires a significant level of renewable energy build-out, it also demands a resilient power system capable of absorbing and storing fluctuations in weather-driven generation, and at the same time, meeting the demand of new electricity loads from electric cars, residential heating, and data centres.
Due to its isolated grid, the current level of wind generation is limited to ensure system strength is maintained, the authors said.
Achieving a minimum of 70% renewable electricity by 2030 will require significant infrastructure investment as well as capacity to integrate new storage technologies, they said.
“According to the Government’s Climate Action Plan in Ireland, the level of wind capacity may have to increase by up to 300% to achieve the higher level of ambition but also to absorb new electricity loads from electric cars, electric heat pumps, and significant growth in Ireland’s data centre industry.”
The all-island electricity system in 2030 will be different in scale and configuration from the system we see today, according to the authors.
The key findings of the report indicated that the system will be 40% larger in capacity and will emit half of the carbon emissions of today.
In 2030, we will need all planned electricity interconnectors: North-South, Ireland-UK, and Ireland-France in place. Back-up generation fuelled by natural gas will be essential but used less, they said.
In cold, windless, and cloudy conditions, where electricity demand is high but weather dependant generation is low, we will need all back-up generation to be available and all storage and system flexibility to be maximised.
A much more flexible and agile electricity grid will be needed to absorb the projected level of weather dependant generation, the authors said.
Reference: Irish Examiner