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Cloud Data Storage Businesses

Underwater Datacenter Will Open For Business This Year (theregister.com) 71

A company called Subsea Cloud is planning to have a commercially available undersea datacenter operating off the coast of the US before the end of 2022, with other deployments planned for the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea. The Register reports: Subsea, which says it has already deployed its technology with "a friendly government faction," plans to put its first commercial pod into the water before the end of this year near Port Angeles, Washington. The company claims that placing its datacenter modules underwater can reduce power consumption and carbon dioxide emissions by 40 percent, as well as lowering latency by allowing the datacenter to be located closer to metropolitan areas, many of which are located near the coast. However, according to Subsea founder Maxie Reynolds, it can also deploy 1MW of capacity for as much as 90 percent less cost than it takes to get 1MW up and running at a land-based facility.

The Port Angeles deployment, known as Jules Verne, will comprise one 20ft pod, which is similar in size and dimensions to a standard 20-foot shipping container (a TEU or Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit). Inside, there is space for about 16 datacenter racks accommodating about 800 servers, according to Subsea. Additional capacity, if and when required, is delivered by adding another pod. The pod-to-shore link in this deployment provides a 100Gbps connection. As it is a commercial deployment, Jules Verne will be open for any prospective clients or partners to come and check it out, virtually or otherwise, according to Reynolds. It will be sited in shallow water, visible from the port, whereas the Njord01 pod in the Gulf of Mexico and the Manannan pod in the North Sea are expected to be deeper, at 700-900ft and 600-700ft respectively.

The Subsea pods are kept cool by being immersed in water, which is one reason for the reduced power and CO2 emissions. Inside, the servers are also immersed in a dielectric coolant, which conducts heat but not electricity. However, the Subsea pods are designed to passively disperse the heat, rather than using pumps as is typical in submersion cooling in land-based datacenters. But what happens if something goes wrong, or a customer wants to replace their servers? According to Subsea, customers can schedule periodic maintenance, including server replacement, and the company says that would take 4-16 hours for a team to get to the site, bring up the required pod(s), and replace any equipment.

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Underwater Datacenter Will Open For Business This Year

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  • Windows (Score:5, Funny)

    by Ann Coulter ( 614889 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:07AM (#62845821)

    The datacenter modules are more efficient and less error prone because no one installed windows on them.

    • And instead of bugs, they will have barnacles in their systems.
      • Re: Windows (Score:5, Insightful)

        by CaptQuark ( 2706165 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @07:00AM (#62845885)

        It seems like they would get about 90+% of the savings by just leaving the pod on land and using an underwater heat exchanger instead. The same amount of heat will be produced by the servers, and a small motor to pump the radiator fluid would remain above water and air cooled. I don't see any other CO2 savings by immersing the whole pod at a depth where it isn't a hazard to shipping lanes.

        Unlike the fully submerged model, if someone needs to work on their servers, you don't have to take the entire server pod offline. If cooling for each rack or 4U block can be isolated for maintenance, the many of the other 799 servers can continue to operate.

        I know many large data centers are currently being cooled by either using treated drinking water, or using nearby rivers as huge heat sinks. Neither option is garnering them many supporters. https://time.com/5814276/googl... [time.com]

        • Maybe just running data centers in cold regions like northern canada, alaska, norway, greenland would be sufficient? Or as you suggest, water heat exchangers out of lake superior or something. It never gets too terribly hot around there.
          • Re: Windows (Score:5, Interesting)

            by mprindle ( 198799 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @09:31AM (#62846197)
            There are datacenters located in cold dry regions just for that reason. This is great, except for latency. The further away the datacenter is away from the customer the longer it takes for the info to get there and the more the datacenter has to pay for transit through the various networks. At some point is is less expensive to build a center closer to service a region and pay the additional electrical costs. What this group is attempting to do is locate the center close to a highly populated area and reduce the costs by using the cool water.
        • by Syberz ( 1170343 )
          On the other hand, the cost of buying or renting land on which to put the pods (when in or near cities) is incredibly expensive, much more so than 700ft underwater I'd imagine. Makes we wonder, do they pay property taxes for underwater land?
        • The standard /. armchair instant engineer analysis -- I just heard of this but I know its dumb because...

          There are several advantages mentioned, among them not needing expensive coastal land to get the data center near the ocean for cooling, or near the city for low latency. And you can make it not a hazard for shipping lanes by not putting it in shipping lanes. They are called "lanes" because the restrict ships to specific channels. Then too - the maximum draft of a container ship (a very large one) is 16

          • Also I suspect that they have a lot of data on actual server rack access requirements and the "but one server out of 800 needs some maintenance so now they to take them all down!" arguments is empty. If it is one server they can simply take it off-line in this day of cloud-computing. Workloads are not tied to individual server boxes anymore. Not everything you think of as a possible problem has merit.

            That is true. I was referring to the summary where they said " But what happens if something goes wrong, or a customer wants to replace their servers? According to Subsea, customers can schedule periodic maintenance, including server replacement, and the company says that would take 4-16 hours for a team to get to the site, bring up the required pod(s), and replace any equipment.". I was thinking if the pod was above water, the 4-16 hours of delay to raise the pod would be unnecessary.

            Granted, there must

        • It seems like they would get about 90+% of the savings by just leaving the pod on land and using an underwater heat exchanger instead.

          Waterfront property is not that easy / cheap to get as just dumping something underwater. Also then you need infrastructure to move water which costs money. There's some real benefits to simple submersion.

          Plenty of downsides too, but I'd like to think a company investing many millions of dollars actually did a Cost-Benefit analysis, and while we have nothing good to say about "UX Experience Managers" at Microsoft, the entire company isn't staffed by idiots.

        • As you point out, the green lobby is very worried about your exit water being a quarter of a degree hotter than its intake and thus on-shore, cost and energy effective methods are being opposed over these which because they donâ(TM)t use conventional ac will now be designated green.

      • This can be resolved with shell-scripting!

    • by dereference ( 875531 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @07:28AM (#62845929)
      They did this for two years [slashdot.org], about two years ago. Their capsule was filled with nitrogen, rather than a dielectric coolant, but apparently it was quite reliable. We see no commercial offering from them yet, so perhaps it wasn't quite as great of a success as they had hoped.
      • by Thud457 ( 234763 )

        Homer, that's your solution to everything: to move under the sea! It's not going to happen!

        You now have the Little Mermaid song running through your head. Happy Friday.

      • We see no commercial offering from them yet, so perhaps it wasn't quite as great of a success as they had hoped.

        You typically don't go from such an outlandish concept pilot to full commercial in a short period of time, especially when you promise your customers certain reliability. I suspect it may have been a roaring success. Mind you COVID was a bit of a distraction the past few years too.

    • Haha, funny, Windows these days is just as secure as Linux. People seem to be blind to all the updates Linux gets to fix security issues. Linux is just as crap as Windows is in regard to security, except Windows us still the most common OS used which is why it's still targeted more, but you already see a major increase in attacks on Linux the last couple of years.
  • by ginyard007 ( 2657989 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:20AM (#62845833)
    Qualifications and Experience Must Have: -1 year managing server hardware in a Datacentre environment - 1 year underwater diving in commercial capacity - 1 wetsuit (SCUBA gear rental available) Desirable - PADI/BSAC or equivalent diving certification - High School Diploma or international equivalent - A spirit of adventure! - Own pneumatic speargun
  • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:23AM (#62845835) Journal
    I think we can write "Phishing attack" with an F at some point.
  • by ClueHammer ( 6261830 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:30AM (#62845843)
    another environmental disaster inbound!
    • by jeadly ( 602916 )
      Cut out that wasteful CO2 middleman and just pipe the heat directly into the artic ice shelf, brilliant!
      • At massive scale, for sure. But given the mass involved it would take an amazing amount to have any measurable effect. The effect of consuming more power for heat removal with vapor compression cycle refrigeration would likely have a higher impact.
        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          Actually, if they use lakes this could be a problem. Not sure. It's been a problem with nuclear reactors. Of course, it would take a really LARGE data "pod" to be the equivalent of a nuclear reactor.

          • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
            the effluent temperature of the main condenser of one of the two 150MW reactors on the USS Texas was around 120F, but I forget its GPM rating. I want to say 500gpm but my latter years was on the USS Abraham Lincoln which was a significantly larger engine room. Thats just one condenser mind you, off a single turbine that drove one of the screws. We also had 4 turbine generators per plant with various run times and 4 main feed pumps that were steam driven. But usually all their effluent sea water temps were
            • by HiThere ( 15173 )

              Yes, and lakes vary a lot in size. Also sensitivity. E.g. in some lakes disrupting the thermocline from forming in winter could kill various kinds of animals, especially the extremely small ones near the base of the food chain.

              I can't see any of the great lakes having a problem with this, or any of the larger rivers. (And only the larger rivers are likely to be deep enough.) But with smaller lakes that don't have a lot of flow through ... yeah, it could be a problem even for a bunch of data pods.

              That sa

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:42AM (#62845857)
    If a server goes down or requires on-site maintenance you're basically fucked. And is the whole pod suppose to be risen to the surface to just to take out one bad card or whatever? Seems inconvenient. I also imagine there are fun new scenarios to think about - entire server setting on fire under the sea, anchors ripping cables out, leaks, damp, storms detethering / tipping pods over etc.

    So maybe it would be simpler to leave the servers on land or at least house them in a river, deep lake or quarry where some of the issues could be mitigated.

    • I was thinking along the same lines. Thinking HDD replacements, you would have to pull the whole thing up.

      They must deploy these things with a ton of extra redundancy and only haul them up on pre-arranged maintenance schedules.

    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Friday September 02, 2022 @08:06AM (#62845981) Homepage Journal

      No you scale horizontally and don't care about any particular server. When, say, 30% of them have failed in a container you move services to a different container and do maintenance on the idle one.

    • Now hiring IT professionals. Must by Cisco and SCUBA certified.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @11:40AM (#62846613)

      If a server goes down or requires on-site maintenance you're basically fucked. And is the whole pod suppose to be risen to the surface to just to take out one bad card or whatever? Seems inconvenient.

      You are inadvertently making a point for putting the pod underwater (though simply locking the door can accomplish the same thing).

      In a modern high up-time data center you do not want techs stumbling and fumbling through the racks to swap out a single card, because having people moving around in the data center, is a key problem in getting those high nines. Modern centers are "lights-out" no access places except for rare occasions of major system upgrades. Workloads are distributed across the entire server farm and are moved from box to box automatically as needed. The idea of a single box committed to one application that it tied to it is obsolete and has been for nigh upon twenty years now when server virtualization became common.

  • by SciCom Luke ( 2739317 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @06:44AM (#62845863)
    Oh, come on!

    'A 20 foot pod is similar in size to a 20 foot container.'

    No shit, Sherlock.
    • No shit, Sherlock.

      You'd be amazed at the number of people who when you ask them "What's heavier, a pound of feathers, or a pound of lead" actually stop and think about it.

  • ...Underwater Basket Weaving will finally pay off. Toldja, Mom!

  • In salt water? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @07:08AM (#62845897)

    Wouldn't something like Lake Michigan be colder and less corrosive?

    • But then it's in Michigan...

    • Corrosion isn't some unknown or unsolvable problem. It's just a simple engineering input which needs to be managed. Hell I just got off a floating vessel which has been stationary and ankered in the ocean, never removed for over 25 years.

  • Our sprinkler system recently turned our datacenter into an underwater datacenter, but that didn't really make the news. Well, beyond our customers, that is...

  • this screams (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Vintermann ( 400722 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @08:00AM (#62845975) Homepage

    This screams "investor trap" to me.

  • ...this business will go under.

  • I can see the ads now... Must have prior data center experience and current Scuba certification.

  • So this is where subdomains come from! (We had totally discussed this a decade ago and I have to credit a former coworker Kay for the funnyism.)
  • Reminded me of the data haven that was built in Neal Stephenson's novel, Cryptonomicon.
  • I wonder what they use as a dielectric, nothing toxic when leaked I hope ?
  • they are trying to solve. I did some analysis and data modeling for a geothermal power plant, client work, close to 15 years ago. I kept an eye on the prototypes and how it progressed. They had to change their business model because of the cooling problem. The issue was that, like in a previous comment, they pumped the excess heat out into a local river (it's really big isn't it?) and unsurprisingly fish started dying and (poisonous) algae grew at the site.

    My point is this: we all think the environment is
    • they are trying to solve. I did some analysis and data modeling for a geothermal power plant, client work, close to 15 years ago. I kept an eye on the prototypes and how it progressed. They had to change their business model because of the cooling problem. The issue was that, like in a previous comment, they pumped the excess heat out into a local river (it's really big isn't it?) and unsurprisingly fish started dying and (poisonous) algae grew at the site. ...
      Is the Pacific Ocean big enough to absorb ANY amount of heat we need to get rid of? It seems doubtful.

      Simply put, yes. The amount of heat we humans can directly generate could easily be dissipated by the Pacific Ocean. The problem behind global warming is that we have accidentally leveraged a MUCH larger source of heat--the sun.

      This particular test is in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, which supplies far more water flow (est 20-30 times more) than all the earth's rivers combined (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_de_Fuca_Channel#The_amount_of_water_in_the_channel). So as long as they place the containers in a

      • "simply put, No." My whole point is that we as a species never see the obvious outcomes of infinite (.........fill in the blank.......). We don't want to to see the obvious. Example: Your toilet. every day you shit in it and flush. Problem solved. Right? No more shit in your house. Multiply by 9 billion people. Where does all that shit go? Example2: Food. You bought a piece of meat on styrofoam, wrapped in plastic wrap. You fry up your meat, and throw your styrofoam and plastic wrap in the garbage. You pu
  • by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Friday September 02, 2022 @11:26AM (#62846547)

    1 MW of heat dispersed over an ocean is insignificant. However, there is no heat dispersal mechanism, so the temperature rise near the container should be quite high, with some gradient with increasing distance from the container. 1 MW in a local area is likely to affect/kill most animal and plant life near the container, with additional consequences for the down-current environment.

  • Pumping heat directly into the already warming ocean. Sounds legit.
  • Subsea Cloud: Hi I'd like a business loan.
    Loan Officer: Tell me about your company.
    Subsea Cloud: Well... It's going to be underwater pretty soon...
    Loan Officer: Sorry, we can't help unless you have positive assets.
    Subsea Cloud: No. I mean the property will be underwater.
    Loan Officer: Sorry, we can't help if you're property is flooded. Do you have insurance?
    ...

  • lowering latency by allowing the datacenter to be located closer to metropolitan areas,

    How long before we have undersea data centers actually build over undersea fiber optic cables and tapping directly in?

  • I like this thing from an environmental perspective, and it really does seem like it will have some energy advantages. However, what about physical security?

    In the developed world, there's no real concern that someone will sabotage- either for political reasons, religious reasons, or even just for the lulz- a datacenter (or any other building with a lot of valuable assets in it). They are reasonably large and secure, and like everything else, reasonably surveilled. Someone trying to damage them would hav

  • instead of putting it in the US, put it in Pakistan.
  • Sink a big plastic hose down in the water with perforations and bubblers at the bottom and you get all the cooling water you need up top. In a relatively shallow bit of water near the coast with strong tidal flows mixing of water layers shouldn't be a relevant environmental disturbance.

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