Recent claims by owners of large data centers that a large part of their operations are powered by renewable energy have skeptics coming out of from under their solar panels. Now, there is hard data proving that skepticism is valid, writes energy consultant and author Jim Pierobon. He applauds the efforts of companies like Amazon, Apple and Google to strive for clean energy, but calls for more transparency on their actual practices.
A recent report by Lux Research casts a large shadow on some data centersâ clean-energy claims. Scientists at Lux Research found the data centers frequently draw on far more coal-fired power with its much higher emissions than renewables. Companies such as Google, Amazon and Apple should be careful about the claims they make, lest they come across partly as PR stunts.
Amazonâs claims are off-base in 23 of its data centers in Virginia. It is less than transparent about how it calculates its emissions
âThey arenât doing as much as they claim about sourcing their electricity,â said Ory Zik, Lux Vice President of Analytics.
Full-time
Data centers need a lot of power to run 24/7. They cannot rely on the intermittent supplies that come from solar and wind energy systems. As a result, they must draw electricity from the regional power grid. Solar and wind systems they have deployed or are developing can help supply renewable power to their centers and to power grids. But they supply nowhere near enough electricity on their own to run operate data centers reliably full-time.
To determine the roles that various fuels play in powering data centers, Lux scientists divided the U.S. grid into 134 regions with data that is updated monthly by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (see the chart above). This compares to the 24 regions in the âeGridâ dataset that center operators currently rely on, which is updated only annually, most recently in 2012.
âWe found that Google underestimates its dependence on coal in four out of seven data centers, in particular in its Berkeley County, South Carolina, location,â Zik said. As a result, the emissions Google is linked to are likely larger than they estimate by 42,000 million tons of carbon dioxide per year. Thatâs the equivalent of about 8,500 additional SUVs on the road.
Off-base
Zik said Amazonâs claims are off-base in 23 of its data centers in Virginia. Furthermore, the online retailer and web services company is less than transparent about how it calculates its emissions, Zik continued. Those 23 centers use electricity from a grid that is powered 43 percent by coal, not 35 percent as inferred using the eGrid data set. This difference amounts to 85,000 million tons of carbon dioxide per year more, or about 5,000 householdsâ worth of emissions, according to Lux.
âWeâve made a lot of progress on this commitment,â Amazon claims on its website. âAs of April 2015, approximately 25 percent of the power consumed by our global infrastructure comes from renewable energy sources. By the end of 2016, we intend to reach 40 percent.â
On its site, Google says âWeâre currently using renewable energy to power 37 percent of our operations and expect this to increase significantly in the next two years. In fact in our 2015 White House Climate Pledge, we commit to tripling our purchases of renewable energy by 2025.â
Dirty data
Amazon, Google and their industry brethren got their first dose of âheatâ on the subject in 2011 when Greenpeace grabbed what data were available at the time and issued its How Dirty is your Data report. The authors tried to shame the companies into using their relative wealth, transformative technology and corporate cultures to supply their operations with renewables.
Perhaps, then, there was an overreaction by PR-minded executives looking to get ahead of any controversy. But data tools such as Luxâs are catching up with them.
So, whatâs their story now? Neither Google, Amazon nor Apple was willing to comment for the record by press time.
Alex Epstein, a contributor to Forbes and author of âThe Moral Case for Fossil Fuels,â took a shot at Apple last month here, criticizing it for âenergy accounting sleight-of-handâ by âconcealing that the vast majority of computer energy use comes from coal-powered manufacturing and the coal-powered Internet.â
After a quick search, Apple has since yanked one graphic from its website cited by Epstein but this text, in the adjacent box, remains on the site.
Monetary value
Power supplied to the grid in many parts of the country earns renewable energy certificates, or RECs for short. Those credits place a monetary value on every megawatt-hour of renewable electricity solely for its environmental attributes. The credits are meant to boost the value of renewable energy systems among participating states. But they should not be confused with actual electricity generation. The values of credits fluctuate with market forces. They can be traded among owners in states with renewable energy requirements. Too often, data center operators fail to make that distinction.
Itâs time for data center owners to bring their energy decisions the same data-driven rigor they use in the rest of their businesses
âWith the tools now available, itâs time for data center owners to bring their energy decisions the same data-driven rigor they use in the rest of their businesses,â Zik said.
Looking at the big picture, the fact that Amazon, Apple, Google and others are striving for cleaner and more sustainable energy supplies should be commended. That said, if they want to claim it, they should back it up in step with their current business practices. As among the largest electricity users on the plant, they are leading by example. Letâs hope they just keep the cart behind the horse and be more transparent in justifying their claims.
Something else to note: Data going back to 2012 does not capture the quickly evolving generation landscapes in many states due to growth in natural gas and solar and the closure of dozens of coal plants. That alone should provide a more accurate picture.
Editorâs Note
This article was first published on Jim Pierobonâs blog The Energy Fix and is republished here with permission of the author. As a career-long advocate for cleaner, safer and more secure energy solutions, Jim creates and helps execute digital campaigns for a variety of trade association/NGO, government agency, smart grid, renewable energy and utility clients through Pierobon & Partners. He provides updates on these columns at TheEnergyFix.com. Among other positions, he has co-managed the energy and environmental practice at Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide, served as VP-Market Development and Chief Marketing Officer of Standard Solar, Inc. and was the Chief Energy Writer at the Houston Chronicle.