As we work on play on our iPhones, surf
web sites or perhaps even work on our own web sites, there's not
just the electricity consumption at our end, but on the service
providers side as well.
With the Internet and related
telecommunications playing such an important role in many of our
lives now, the impact in relation to carbon emissions associated
with electricity consumption of data centers and related
infrastructure are considerable - and will only grow in the years
ahead.
The servers we access in our online pursuits are often power hungry
and get rather warm. A data center without air conditioning is one
headed for meltdown, so aside from server electricity consumption,
there is a considerable amount of energy used in keeping data
centers at the right temperature.
In a recent Greenpeace report entitled "Make IT Green: Cloud
Computing and its Contribution to Climate Change", the
organization calculates that by 2020, data center operations
combined with telecommunications related electricity consumption
could be in the realm 622.6 billion kilowatt hours annually.
Greenpeace says Internet and telecommunication companies should be
pushing for increased renewable
energy to power their operations and is challenging the major
players to lobby government on policies that support renewable
sources like wind
energy and solar
power .
The organization says it's not enough for owners of data centers to
simply improve efficiency within their buildings as it often just
maximizes output from the cheapest and dirtiest energy source
available, such
as coal.
What can we do as individuals to help in greening the Internet? We
can lobby the online services we utilize to use green power by
sending them email asking about how their power is sourced and
mentioning that we would like to see them using clean, renewable
energy. By showing these companies significant numbers of their
users and customers are concerned, it may then help trigger more of
them to take action sooner rather than later.
If you're a web site owner, perhaps also contact your web host and
let them know you would like them shift to green power. If they
aren't open to that suggestion and if you don't want to move to a
web host that does, there's another option.
You may have noticed this site is powered by renewable energy. My
web host doesn't have solar
panels on their roof, a wind turbine out in the parking lot, nor
do they access green power from the grid (yet). What I do is to buy
wind and solar "green
tags" to offset the dirty power. I pay for the equivalent
amount of wind and solar energy sourced electricity that powers my
share of the server Green Living Tips is hosted on to be added to
the mains grid.
Aside from getting online service providers and telecommunications
companies to go green, we of course also need to continue to look at
what we're consuming at our own end. You can buy
green electricity for your home, even just a small percentage
for starters, or implementing a few simple green
computing tips can help reduce your online related emissions
impact.