Volkswagen opens carbon neutral data center in Norway
19 June 2019
The Volkswagen Group has opened a new, climate neutral data center in Rjukan (Norway). The facility was set up in just six months in collaboration with the Norwegian partner Green Mountain. The data center will be 100% powered by hydropower in the future, thus saving more than 5,800 tons of CO2 per year compared to a conventionally operated data center.
The maximum output of 2,750 kilowatts will be used by the Volkswagen Passenger Cars and Audi brands for high-performance servers, on which computer-intensive vehicle development projects are processed. These include the simulation of crash tests and virtual wind tunnel tests. The Volkswagen Group focuses on economic and ecological factors in the development of additional computing capacity.
In future, the computing power of the new location will be used by the Volkswagen Passenger Cars and AUDI brands for their vehicle development projects. These include simulations of crash tests and virtual wind tunnel tests. Such calculations are not time critical, but very complex and energy intensive. Outsourcing them to external data centers hugely relieves the IT infrastructure at domestic locations.
Locations in the Nordic countries of Europe qualify due to their good availability of more favorable, environmentally friendly energy and weather conditions, which can be used for efficient cooling of the facilities. The Volkswagen Group already operates a carbon neutral data center in Iceland (Reykjanesbær). It is about the same size as its Norwegian pendant, saving more an 6,200 tons of CO2 per year.
In addition, Volkswagen operates data centers within many of its national and international sites. Their performance is primarily used for business-critical applications, including applications for production, logistics or sales. Volkswagen places high demands on energy efficiency at these data centers as well. Measures such as indirect free cooling, adjustments of cold water temperatures and the exclusive use of energy-saving operating systems ensure very efficient data center energy consumption even in central European latitudes.
I've seen proposals to put data centers in the arctic because of the ease of cooling there.
Dunno who they'd get to run them, though.
Posted by: Engineer-Poet | 19 June 2019 at 06:41 AM