This is not an isolated case in the United States, a country that concentrates
approximately 30% of all the data centers in the world. Arizona, Utah and South
Carolina are well aware of the insatiable thirst of this type of infrastructure.
They are also familiar with it in the Netherlands, where Microsoft was involved
in a scandal last year when news broke out that one of its facilities consumed
four times more water than declared in a context of drought. Or in Germany,
where Brandenburg authorities denied Google permission to build a data center in
the region, as a Tesla gigafactory was already consuming too much water.
If it make you feel better, they could do it all with one closed loop and just use the ground as the sink.
I don’t how that should make me feel any better 😀 . But I don’t know if ground is a good enough sink for that.
They could then power it entirely off solar panels and Iron air or sodium batteries.
I don’t think they’re going to consider renewables for cooling alone when the entire operation needs enormous amounts of power that cannot be satisfied by renewables.
They’d cool their servers with the blood of children if it saved them money.
I don’t how that should make me feel any better 😀 . But I don’t know if ground is a good enough sink for that.
I don’t think they’re going to consider renewables for cooling alone when the entire operation needs enormous amounts of power that cannot be satisfied by renewables.
Amen to that! Like I said - perverse incentives.
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