future challenges for data centers

23
Latest Developments in Data Centre Energy and Power Issues Bill St. Arnaud [email protected]

Upload: bill-st-arnaud

Post on 23-Jan-2015

315 views

Category:

Business


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Future challenges for data center operators

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Future challenges for data centers

Latest Developments in Data Centre Energy and Power Issues

Bill St. [email protected]

Page 2: Future challenges for data centers

2

Theme of this talk

• Electrical energy cost and its reliability are increasingly the two biggest concerns for most data center operators

• This talk will focus on the latest developments on alternate energy sources and power reliability for data centers

• But consideration of power issues and reliability also impacts data and network architecture of data center

Page 3: Future challenges for data centers

3

Cost of power for data centers• Power consumption is jumping astronomically

– 19% last year, 15% this year• Electrical cost also increasing significantly

– E.g 30% in Ontario• Within next 5 – 10 years we will have carbon tax

or cap and trade– Will raise prices another 5-20%

Page 4: Future challenges for data centers

• Half of ICT consumption is data centers

• In ten years 50% of today’s Data Centers and major science facilities in the US will have insufficient power and cooling;*

• CO2 emissions from US datacenters greater than all CO2 emissions from Netherlands or Argentina http://bit.ly/cW6jEY

• Data center electricity is 31GW globally, and that will increase 19 percent in 2012 http://dlvr.it/1RwhWG

*Source: Gartner; Meeting the DC power and cooling challenge

Growth Projections Data Centers

Page 5: Future challenges for data centers

5

Reliability of the Grid• Weather related outages and duration have

increased significantly

• Other threats include :– Geo-magnetic solar storms– EMP and RF weapons used by terrorists

• Easy to protect data center from such events, but much harder to protect electrical grid infrastructure

• Particular vulnerability is Large Power Transformers (LPTs), which are custom-designed, expensive to replace and hard to transport. – LPTs weight between 100 and 400 tons, cost

millions of dollars and can take as long as 20 months to manufacture

Page 6: Future challenges for data centers

6

Scary reading• “US Energy sector vulnerabilities to climate change and extreme

weather” US Department of Energy July 2013– http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2013/07/f2/20130716-Energy%20

Sector%20Vulnerabilities%20Report.pdf

Recent Sample outages

• Rising water temps forcing power plant shutdowns

• Coal and nuclear power generating capacity will decrease by between 4 and 16 percent in the United States and a 6 to 19 percent decline in Europe due to lack of cooling water.• http://www.reuters.com/ar

ticle/2012/06/04/climate-water-energy-idUSL3E8H41SO20120604

Page 7: Future challenges for data centers

Half of US experienced record droughts or deluges in 2012

2010 warmest year ever – we are only at the start of the curve of the hockey stick. The worst is yet to come

Page 8: Future challenges for data centers

8

Blame it on CanadaHow warming in the Arctic affects weather in Texas and Europe

• Warming Arctic slowing down jet stream– There’s been a 20 percent drop in the zonal wind

speeds.

• As get stream slows down, it leads to those bigger, long lived kinks in the jet stream.– That amplification is associated with persistent

weather patterns that lead to “extremes” like drought, flooding and heat waves.

• Those slow-moving, persistent waves of weather energy may have played a role in the big snows that hammered Europe this winters, as well as the extreme drought that hit South West US

• http://summitcountyvoice.com/2012/01/14/global-warming-revenge-of-the-atmosphere/

Page 9: Future challenges for data centers

Future Droughts• Palmer Drought Severity Index, or PDSI.

• The most severe drought in recent history, in the Sahel region of western Africa in the 1970s, had a PDSI of -3 or -4.

• By 2030 Western USA could see -4 to -6. Drought in Texas clearly caused by global warming: http://goo.gl/QjHRS

• By 2100 some parts of the U.S. and Latin America could see -8 to -10 PDSI, while Mediterranean areas could see drought in the -15 or -20 range.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39741525/ns/us_news-environment

/

Page 10: Future challenges for data centers

Dramatic changes in precipitation

• Every continent has suffered record rainfalls• Rains submerged one-fifth of Pakistan, a

thousand-year deluge swamped Nashville and storms just north of Rio caused the deadliest landslides Brazil has ever seen.

• Observed increase in precipitation in the last few decades has been due in large part to a disproportionate increase in heavy and extreme precipitation rates which are exceeding predictions made in models

Page 11: Future challenges for data centers

11

What does 1C average temperature mean?

• In the 1700s – when global average temperature was .8C colder than now, New Yorkers could walk from Manhattan to Staten Island on ice as thick as 8 feet– http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/01/31

/in-the-little-ice-age-lessons-for-today/

Page 12: Future challenges for data centers

12

What is the solution for DC operator?

Reduce dependency on electrical grid as much as possible:

1. Develop Climate Change Preparedness plan as per President Obama’s Executive Order

2. Make sure your diesel generator is properly installed and serviced

3. Get independent source of electrical power from your own dams, windmills or solar panel array

4. Use natural gas or bio-gas to generate electricity through micro-turbines, cogen or fuel cells

5. Build highly distributed data centers using following the wind or follow the sun architectures

Page 13: Future challenges for data centers

Presentation title

President Obama’s Executive Order on Climate Change Preparedness

• All US government departments, agencies, data centers, etc must develop climate change preparedness plans

• States, municipalities, universities and other institutions are also encouraged to develop similar plans

• Disaster preparedness plans must cover range of scenarios of severe flooding, droughts, hurricanes, long term power outages, etc

• DC operators must look at number of scenarios that could significantly impact operations

Page 14: Future challenges for data centers

14

Lessons from Sandy about backup diesels

• Make sure fuel is changed every year– Diesel fuel deteriorates much faster than gasoline

• Arrange for long term, high priority fuel contracts from a number of refineries

• Make sure IT staff know how to change fuel and air filters

• Make sure fuel pumps are self priming, collocated with diesel and connected to UPS

• Make sure all electrical cabling, transformers and switch gear are in water tight compartments – Double check all egress and ingress ports through

walls

Page 15: Future challenges for data centers

Many DCs are acquiring their own power dams

• OVH in Montreal - worlds largest data center operator

• Cisco, EMC in Holyoke, MA

• Google in Finland

• There are many abandoned paper mills, aluminum smelters, etc in Canada with their own power dams

• Some DCs are looking to deploy “run of the river” generating systems that require no dams

Page 16: Future challenges for data centers

Many other examples

Hydro-electric powered data centers

ASIO solar powered data centers

17

Ecotricity in UK builds windmills at data center locations with no capital cost to user

Page 17: Future challenges for data centers

17

Fuel Cells, Microturbines, Cogen• Several data centers being built independent of

electrical grid using natural gas

• Converting gas to electricity can be done with micro turbines, fuel cells or traditional cogen

• Cost of electricity from gas much cheaper than from grid– Can sell excess power to the grid– Standby propone tank in case of disruption in gas feed– Power distribution system can be sized as demand

warrants from growth in data center

• In Europe and US several data centers are using biogas from farm or human waste

Page 18: Future challenges for data centers

Follow the Sun/Wind Distributed Data Center

GreenStar NetworkWorld’s First Zero Carbon Cloud/Internet

Page 19: Future challenges for data centers

SDN Follow the wind/Follow the sun

Cloud Manager

Host Resource

Cloud Manager

Network Manager

VM

Mantychore2

Host Resource

Canadian GSN Domain

European GSN Domain

Dynamically ConfigureIP Tunnel

• Shudown VM• Copy Image • Update VM Context

• Start VM

Export VM

VMVM

Internet

Notify EU Cloud Manager

Cloud Proxy Host Cloud Proxy

Lightpath

Optical switch Optical switch

Shared storage

Shared storage

Host

Page 20: Future challenges for data centers

Hewlett Packard & Clarkson U GreenCloud

• Optimizing the utilization of the available renewable power for computing by intelligently redistributing computational load;

• Minimizing losses associated with power transmission by placing the PODs near the power source;

• Providing energy and design efficiency through the use of additional passive cooling for the PODs

• Use the wind power that is currently stranded, i.e. not-delivered to the grid due to the T&D constraints.

Page 21: Future challenges for data centers

IBM National GreenCloud Vision

Page 22: Future challenges for data centers

22

Don’t forget the wide area network• Network is just as vulnerable as data center to reliability in electrical

grid

• Most telco based networks have multiple electrical powered repeater huts for amplification and add/drop– Usually in remote locations and more difficult to service, or re-fuel generators

• Most DC operators are choosing dark fiber for reliability reasons– Modern dark fiber networks can operate at distances up to 1500km without a

single electrical repeater– Optical repeaters only draw 40W power and can easily be powered with

batteries and solar charging– Architecture is far simpler than telco network and thus easier to manage and

upgrade

Page 23: Future challenges for data centers

Let’s Keep The Conversation Going

E-mail

Blogshttp://green-broadband.blogspot.com

Twitterhttp://twitter.com/BillStArnaud

[email protected]

Bill St. Arnaud is a R&E Network and Green IT consultant who works with clients on a variety of subjects such as green data centers and networks. He also works with clients to develop practical solutions to reduce GHG emissions from ICT (See http://green-broadband.blogspot.com/) .