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EPA Reaches Goal On Data Center Study
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Tue Jul 01, 2008 10:12 PM
from the no-plans-to-talk-about-yet-anyway dept.
from the no-plans-to-talk-about-yet-anyway dept.
1sockchuck writes "After initially struggling in its effort to find data center operators willing to share data about their energy usage, the EPA extended the program by a month and has managed to recruit 215 facilities to participate in its program to help the government develop an Energy Star program for data centers. An EPA official says there are no plans to regulate the data center industry."
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Hardware: US Data Centers Wary of Sharing Energy Data With Feds 101 comments
1sockchuck writes "The EPA has been seeking at least 100 data center operators willing to share data about their energy usage to help the government develop an Energy Star program for data centers. Thus far, only 54 data centers have signed up, which suggests that few data center operators are eager to tell the government exactly how much energy they are using. The EPA issued a report to Congress last year on data center power usage, and is already developing an Energy Star program to rate servers. Can a program designed to rank the energy efficiency of appliances and computer monitors be a useful tool in addressing the enormous energy consumption of data centers?"
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no plans to regulate the data center industry... (Score:5, Funny)
...yet.
Is the DEA ever proactive (Score:2)
Anyone motivated enough to get the DEA to do anything will be keen to do some regulating. Getting the DEA to do an investigation is just a formality.
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From my (also very limited) understanding of the DEA, they don't have a lot to do with energy usage and emissions controls.
DEA + EPA (Score:2)
Yeah, sorry I meant EPA but for all the good they do they might as well send in the DEA to to the investigations.
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Hopefully the Drug Enforcement Agency would not be proactive about data center energy consumption. While energy usage is out of their jurisdiction, I can see how it is addictive... always having to plug in just one more server, or had more hard drives to reach maximum capacity.
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Oh, remember the days when the DEA used to put out fires.
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...yet.
My thoughts exactly.
"No plans"? Not quite. (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is political shorthand for "you can bet your ass we'll be pushing for restrictions on data center power usage once the numbers come in".
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If you were from Control, your data centers would already be throttled
Neither of our data centers are throttled, so obviously I'm not from Control.
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That actually makes sense!
(Damn, I have got to find time to see that movie!)
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That actually makes sense!
(Damn, I have got to find time to see that movie!)
What movie?
Re:"No plans"? Not quite. (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
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Without regard to the sort of content being dealt whith, it's completely irrational to apply any sort of standards to data-center power consumption. A data-center that simply regurgitates static continent is going to have significantly different power requirements than a site that is actively dealing with processing and transcoding user-generated content. Compare Youtube to a high-volume brochure-ware site for an extreme example.
The best the EPA could produce, without creating an unnecessary burden on hos
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The Energy Star program needs to establish a program for computer power supplies hands-down, and regulate it. That is the only way to make things work, and it isn't that hard.
As for Energy Star buildings (and speaking as an Energy Star Partner on that one), there might not be direct regulation by the EPA from that, but it did help the push for state energy efficiency codes.
The problem with making emergy efficiency benchmarks for Data Centers is that it is very difficult to provide prescriptive guidelines a
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Which will skew the numbers and when they do setup the EnergyStar program and make the equipment you do use seem like your datacenter is not only destroying the environment, contribute to AWG and that you club baby seals to death for fun and profit.
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No more than the aluminum ore refining industry.
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Which is political shorthand for "you can bet your ass we'll be pushing for restrictions on data center power usage once the numbers come in".
I'm confused. Which faction within the federal government do you think will be pushing for restrictions on data center power consumption... Big Oil, or the coal industry?
It's just 1.21GW (Score:5, Funny)
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Jigga please! -- Chris Rock [youtube.com]
escuse the fuck out of me.. (Score:2)
if the EPA is not addressing more pressing concerns why are they looking at data centers? I don't mean to be rude or obtuse, but if the EPA is only focused on items that have been industry concerns for over a year, perhaps they are better off just being quiet. This is the first step that would be needed for regulation, and followed shortly after by monitoring... WTF? The government won't as a whole admit to global warming, nor to anything like it... why ... oh WHY would the EPA start getting involved... IN
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
The EPA like any government bureaucracy has several components, many of which don't necessarily fall into the realm of highly monitored policy. The Energy Star program has existed since 1992 and pretty much operates under the radar. The fact that the EPA runs the Energy Star program that certifies various components and processes for energy efficiency doesn't mean that there is a coordinated government policy at the EPA to monitor and regulate these components and processes. It is just a small office tha
Re: no plans... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: no plans... (Score:4, Insightful)
This is one of those areas that the government does NOT need to meddle. Price and market will fix it. period. go. ahead. argue. now.
Parent
Re: no plans... (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
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Why is the government wasting our money collecting data? If somebody finds it useful, let them collect the data themselves. Having a Rolls Royce would be useful, but that doesn't mean the government should buy me one.
The only thing the "owners" need to know is that using less energ
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All investments in energy efficiency have to have a measurable payback. A more efficient chiller system will cost about 50% more than the most basic system, and pay back over 5-6 years.
But, that basic system can be re-started in under 3 minutes while the advanced system requires 15 minutes. The basic system can be repaired by anybody, but the advanced system requires a specialized technician.
Suddenly, in order to meet reliability objectives, the data center operator must buy both systems, at a 150% premiu
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Well then, maybe the government should raise their taxes even higher. Just think of all the studies they could fund! I'm sure that won't drive any data centers to India.
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I'm sorry, but you still haven't shown any proof that this study needed to be done by the government. You can try to change the subject all you want, but that doesn't change the fact that any competitive data center would be aiming for higher efficiency because it directly lowers their costs and allows them to offer lower prices than their competitors.
Besides that, if the government isn't going to pass legislation based on the study results, why even bother? It's blatantly obvious that higher efficienc
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But to money on energy I don't need to know how similar houses compare to mine. Neither do data center operators. It's useless trivia, at best.
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> Next you'll decide to rant about them meddling in pharmaceuticals by
> funding cancer research.
What does subsidizing a positive externality have to do with legislating a negative externality. They are not only completely different things, but the exact opposite approach (market vs. legislative) to government.
Where is meta-moderating when you need it...
> The facts of the matter are that datacenter energy use is very poorly
> understood by owners and considered a negligible cost of the business
Wha
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Of course, no one was willing... (Score:5, Funny)
Well duh!! None of the data center operators opened their email.
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no plans to regulate the industry (Score:1)
Who was dumb enough to let them in?????
Re:no plans to regulate the industry (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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I thought he was a thespian. And not all that great of one. What made him a damn actor? Are you showing some bias issues here? And the rest of them are politicians. And many politicians are lawyers. Pretty easy choice of which to believe there.
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regulator doesn't want to regulate. (Score:2)
Regulation would be the next step (Score:2)
right.. They need the data first. Then they will start making the regulation plans.
TerraPass (Score:2)
TerraPass sells carbon offsets for personal and business use. If you look at TerraPass for Business [terrapass.com], you'll see they estimate something for servers in a data center. I have heard that the number includes an average power draw for the electronics, plus cooling, security, networking, and related materials -- somewhere over 500 watts.
We're considering TerraPass, though we haven't come to any conclusions yet.
ooooh, I'm scared of the government (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be nice if your rack had 1 big power supply with standardized plugs, that every vendor's kit would plug into, instead of individual power supplies (and tiny screeching fans) for every box in the rack?
Since the industry has completely failed on this front, maybe it's time for an "EnergyStar Rack Certification" with compliance specs and a cute logo.
I'm no AC engineer, but maybe it makes sense to have 1 big fan at the top and a standardized duct fitting on every racked unit, helping to pull hot air
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Even a half-assed spec would be miles ahead of today's mess. If anyone comes out with a rational, well-thought out spec that isn't welded to a particular vendor, the market will be all over it like rabid piranhas.
EPA is unconstitutional (Score:2)
Nowhere in the US Constitution is the federal government authorized to regulate the environment. The EPA should be abolished.
Not to worry, folks (Score:2)
It's not in the best interest of the government to limit the ability of data centers to collect private data about American citizens.
There, I said it. ...
"Knock. Knock Neo ..."
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Most DOE/DoD labs will have a high-performance computing cluster / supercomputer. That = data center.
Most data centers have had overall efficiency as a secondary metric. Now people are starting to realize how large a portion of their overall hosting costs are related to inefficient hosting.
The idea is to make it easy for dumb consumers. An energy