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Power Technology

Iceland's Data Centers Are Booming -- Here's Why That's a Problem (technologyreview.com) 114

The southwestern tip of Iceland is a barren volcanic peninsula called Reykjanesskagi. It's home to the twin towns of Keflavik and Njardvik, around 19,000 people, and the country's main airport. On the edge of the settlement is a complex of metal-clad buildings belonging to the IT company Advania, each structure roughly the size of an Olympic-size swimming pool. Less than three years ago there were three of them. By April 2018, there were eight. Today there are 10, and the foundations have been laid for an 11th.

From a report: This is part of a boom fostered partly by something that Icelanders don't usually rave about: the weather. Life on the North Atlantic island tends to be chilly, foggy, and windy, though hard frosts are not common. The annual average temperature in the capital, Reykjavik, is around 41F (5C), and even when the summer warmth kicks in, the mercury rarely rises above 68. Iceland has realized that even though this climate may not be great for sunning yourself on the beach, it is very favorable to one particular industry: data. Each one of those Advania buildings in Reykjanesskagi is a large data center, home to thousands of computers. They are constantly crunching away, processing instructions, transmitting data, and mining Bitcoin. Data centers like these generate large amounts of heat and need round-the-clock cooling, which would usually require considerable energy.
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Iceland's Data Centers Are Booming -- Here's Why That's a Problem

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  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:24PM (#58783566) Journal

    "Here's Why That's a Problem" in the title. But the summary mentions no problem what-so-fucking-ever.

    As clickbaits go, this was low effort.

    • Also.... 11 swimming pool sized "data centers" doesn't make for a boom in my book.... that term is reserved for at least 12 or more...

    • Problem is there is no enough optical cables connecting Iceland to world, so the data centers focus on computationally demanding tasks, such as simulations, bitcoin mining.
      There might be not enough electricity if the industry grows too fast. Iceland sells a lot of "green" energy, so the surrounding countries can claim they are ecologically friendly.

      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        Iceland uses Geothermal and has tons of it, which is why they are a major Aluminum exporter, so worries that they'll run out seem greatly premature at this point. Fatter internet pipes to Europe and the US are just a transatlantic cable away. The title seems alarmist but the actual situation seems pretty good.
      • so the surrounding countries can claim they are ecologically friendly.

        Which are the surrounding countries?

        • Greenland - (too low to measure, no grid)
        • Scotland - about 80% hydroelectricity potential already used
        • Norway - ~96% hydroelectricity for power supply

        Iceland would need to export it's electricity a good deal further than "surrounding countries" to "spread it's green goodness".

        Which they are proposing in several ways, such as making hydrogen by the LNG-tanker full and sailing it away to displace some f

    • this was low effort

      Shame on you; what if Msmash spent hours coming up with that shit?? Even idiots have feelings, you know.

      • Shame on you; what if Msmash spent hours coming up with that shit?? Even idiots have feelings, you know.

        I like your style. I don't think I'd marry you, but you seem fun.

    • Yup, low effort horseshit. If anything, the datacenter business will help smooth out their economy against blips in tourism and aluminum production (also electricity bound) which together are most of the GDP afaik.
    • "Here's Why That's a Problem" in the title. But the summary mentions no problem what-so-fucking-ever."

      There is no problem. Computers stay cool, the land is cheap, electricity even more so.

      Iceland apparently 'only' has 3 big tubes connecting it to the rest of the series and now foreign companies, running the datacenters, will put more of them into service for free, just as insurance since nobody else cares.

    • by cwatts ( 622605 )

      The reason data centers like iceland isnt the "brisk weather", (as the article notes, its not that cold there) . The competitive advantage of iceland is cheap electricty- there are enormous geothermal and hydro reserves that are quite effectively exploited. That's why iceland is the aluminum capital of the world too- pulling that shit outta bauxite takes hella coulombs.

      I read the (rather fluffy) article, and they seem to have missed that. And I agree, there is no real problem identified.

      Cool icel

      • Sadly. as a nonresident, this request was denied. "pen" (with the iceland TLD) was already taken.

        Let me guess - it's for the penis museum?

        Oh, sad! it's redirected to a shop offering " Spil FatnaÃur Bindi&Blæti GrÃn Sleipiefni-Smokkar-OFL" or even "SnyrtivÃrur". Quite what they're doing with Odin's 8-legged stallion ...

        The Penis Museum is The Icelandic Phallological Museum [phallus.is]

    • They did mention some “problems.”

      The data centers are using 91MW of power. That is power that could be better used for Iceland non-existant fleet of electric cars.

      Someone may be double counting carbon offset certificates. This could risk exposing the entire carbon offset economy as a sham.

      Iceland may have to out in another submaire cable. Accoding to Cyrus West Field’s research, cables can take over 4 years to lay and can only be expected to last about 3 weeks.

    • Youâ(TM)re right! This is another example of how shitty Slashdot is! This is only a tiny excerpt of the full article. To read the full story, go here: https://www.technologyreview.c... [technologyreview.com]
  • Not sure I read the article correctly. You say here is why itâ(TM)s a problem, but donâ(TM)t demonstrate any problem?
    • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@NOSPAM.gmail.com> on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:51PM (#58783762) Journal

      It's not. It's a clickbait headline. Buried deep in the article there's this:

      Under a European Union system that resembles carbon offset programs, Icelandic energy producers have been selling green energy certificates to energy customers elsewhere in Europe. This allows foreign customers to call their electricity renewable even if it’s not, because they are offsetting against Icelandic production.

      However, a 2016 report commissioned by the Icelandic government warned that improperly monitored sales of energy certificates could eventually lead to double counting, with both foreign offsets and local companies laying claim to the same renewable energy.

      So a report from 3 years ago noted there might be an accounting issue with carbon credits. That somehow got spun into a problem with data centers three years later. Is it even a problem, or have they fixed that system based on that report since then?

      How the fuck did this turn into a story in 2019, and how have you not been fired if you're an editor at a website and you approved this garbage?

  • by SirAstral ( 1349985 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:27PM (#58783588)

    Worried about global warming again Slashdot?

  • Sounds like it would be a lot less trouble to be on the mainland. And there are cold places on the mainland as well. Countries connected with a lot more than 3 cables, and probably more redundant electricity sources as well.

    • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:36PM (#58783658)

      Iceland offers cheap hydro and geothermal baseload power as well as a natural heat sink. This saves so much money that it actually pays to ship bauxite in from Australia for smelting in Iceland, and then ship aluminum up to halfway around the world again to markets.

    • The problem with the "mainland" is that you get a continental climate which had wild temperature swings. For example, consider Canada. Somewhere like Edmonton will hit -40C in the winter and +30C in the summer. So you will need cooling for our, admittedly brief, summers but also probably heating for the winter or at least some way to pre-heat the outside air before circulating it since you cannot just vent -40C air into a data centre. So while you may not use either heating or cooling for long you will need
      • you could be on the mainland near the shores, Nova Scotia, Labrador, some places in Quebec, British Columbia.
        And then coastal Norway, Sweden, Finland are also all on the mainland.

        • by amorsen ( 7485 )

          Coastal Norway is awfully wet. This is not a disaster for air cooling, but you do have to be careful when your cooling system relies on 100% saturated air.

          Easily solved with a dehumidifier, but then you might as well air condition...

          • by jbengt ( 874751 )

            Coastal Norway is awfully wet. This is not a disaster for air cooling, but you do have to be careful when your cooling system relies on 100% saturated air.

            Not necessarily a problem for most modern rack servers. If your 100% saturated air is ±60F (±15C) or lower, no dehumidification would be needed. If the air is much above that, then you'll probably need A/C anyway (that is, unless you're running the data center hot, in which case even warmer saturated air could be OK, as far as Relative Humidit

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Iceland has the distinct advantage of being situated on the midatlantic ridge. That means their electricity and heat is basically free. Basically free electricity is why the datacentres are there. The cool, stable climate is just a bonus.

          Every time more than five Icelanders get together they build a swimming pool because hot water is free. Seriously.

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      Facebook has built a large data centre in northern Sweden close to hydroelectric power, and Google has built one in Finland.
      Microsoft and Amazon are building data centres in middle Sweden right now.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:28PM (#58783602)

    I read the whole article.

    The only actual problem I can discern, is that since Iceland is selling credits to EU countries there may be some double counting for the amount of green energy that Iceland produces (they have a lot of geothermal plants, something the article really should have brought up!!).

    But in reality, ignoring the virtual spat over credits, you are left with the very real fact that the data centers that actually are in Iceland are using very green energy to power them, and calling needs are greatly reduced because of natural climate.

    The only thing in the article I could find vaguely against this otherwise perfect arrangement was someone complaining that the power produced by Iceland should be reserved for electric cars because it's "not endless". That seems kind of a silly argument though in an area with as much geothermal potential as Iceland with as few people as they have living there permanently. Plenty to go around, for cars and servers...

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      The only thing in the article I could find vaguely against this otherwise perfect arrangement was someone complaining that the power produced by Iceland should be reserved for electric cars because it's "not endless". That seems kind of a silly argument though in an area with as much geothermal potential as Iceland with as few people as they have living there permanently. Plenty to go around, for cars and servers...

      I would even argue that fossil fuel cars make more sense in places like Iceland. With the combination of low population density and the weather conditions, being able to drive around with an extra can of gas in your trunk if for some reason you were to get stranded or run out of gas. If your battery dies it's kind of hard to carry around a backup.

      • I would even argue that fossil fuel cars make more sense in places like Iceland.

        For sure they do at the moment, there is a lot of area to cover and it's way easier to have some extra gas on hand... even spare solar panels to recharge a car in a pinch might not work for a while as they have lots and lots of cloud cover going on pretty often.

        Probably for the main city they make a lot of sense but there's just not so much load from all the people living there you can't spare energy for lots of other purposes!

      • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@NOSPAM.gmail.com> on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @04:07PM (#58783852) Journal

        Iceland is only 300 miles wide. You really shouldn't have an issue getting stranded when the longest trip you can take on the island is on the order of a tank of gas. For reference, Texas is more than twice as big.

        Norway is way, way bigger, and EVs do fine there.

        • > Iceland is only 300 miles wide

          Maybe, but looking at Google Maps, it appears that 99% of the country lives within a mile or two of a ring road around the country, so most east-west trips across the country probably involve a substantial amount of additional north-south driving.

          It's actually kind of entertaining to look at a map of Iceland & recognize a shockingly large number of place-names courtesy of Ikea :-D

    • by kriston ( 7886 )

      Companies with operations in the Northern Virginia data center market claim to be renewable solely from carbon credits.

      Some very large and very famous companies even claim 100% renewable energy in a region that is powered primarily by coal and natural gas. The two closest nuclear plants are too far from here.

    • The author undertook an impossible task - finding something wrong with a good thing. See, the unpronounceably named author is a "freelance climate reporter", which means his job is to be a sniveling turd who complains about any human activity in the most sensational way possible.

      The biggest problem with the article is that it was printed in a journal carrying MIT's good name.

  • The summary completely skips the case of it being a problem, and the article itself vaguely conveys that it might be a problem, but then also suggests that maybe it isn't.

    • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @03:54PM (#58783772) Journal

      The summary completely skips the case of it being a problem, and the article itself vaguely conveys that it might be a problem, but then also suggests that maybe it isn't.

      It's a problem because we are all* supposed to move back to the cave and live off berries, so if people actually use green energy and solve cooling problems with minimal energy, well, we just can't have that!

      * Well, not all of us ... the connected and famous of course are exempt. As are politicians who work hard to put you back into the cave.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Climate is gonna get you
    The climate is gonna get you
    Climate is gonna get you
    The climate is gonna get youuuuuuu..... TONIGHT!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    As problems go this problem is very problematic. What were we talking about. Oh yeah, I'm outraged!

  • It is smart to use Iceland's naturally cool weather for cooling data centers.

    Hopefully most of the data crunching is something productive rather than mining bitcoins.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      Bitcoin uses an order of magnitude less power per dollar than old-fashioned banking (or even the manufacture of soda cans). Let's not go after the new automated systems when the old manual ones are far more wasteful.

      You might as well complain that combines use more energy than donkeys with plows, but even that would be quite awkward in sensible company.

      • by Misagon ( 1135 )

        Oh really? And you are counting watts per transaction here?

      • by teg ( 97890 )

        Bitcoin uses an order of magnitude less power per dollar than old-fashioned banking (or even the manufacture of soda cans). Let's not go after the new automated systems when the old manual ones are far more wasteful.

        You might as well complain that combines use more energy than donkeys with plows, but even that would be quite awkward in sensible company.

        Actually, bitcoin uses as much energy as the Czech Republic [digiconomist.net]. It's used a very low amount of transactions as actual currency (some for drugs, scams and ransomware) with most of its use being to find a bigger fool.

        . One transaction requires more than 500 kWh...

        When it comes to efficiency, it seems to be about a million times less efficient than visa. [statista.com].

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why not write "the temperature rarely rises"?
    EU banned non-electronic mercury thermometers over a decade ago[1]
    So why start talking about toxic chemical elements nobody born after year 2000 will understand the relationship of. ;-)

    [1] http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+IM-PRESS+20070706IPR08897+0+DOC+XML+V0//EN

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Because the world seems to have gone nuts for cliches. I remember thinking my English teacher was a bit barmy for getting irritated when someone used a cliche, but now I know exactly what she was talking about. Maybe it's because professional writers have been replaced by an army of amateurs who think "inked a deal" is the greatest phrase ever.

  • Explain again why that's bad?

  • As I drive around Northern Virginia and its hundreds and hundreds of data centers, and more being built to the west and south, I wonder if there is going to be a market bubble burst of data centers and what the outcome will be.

  • Apparently the world needs to store this insane amount of data for some reason that eludes me completely.
  • I think the title may have been mistranslated as it took an unnecessary detour through Mandarin. Should have read, "... and here's why that's an opportunity."

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