Categories: Datacentre

Sweden Opens ‘World’s First’ Carbon-Negative Data Centre

The Swedish mining city of Falun has become home to the first ‘climate positive’ data centre, billed as having a negative carbon impact by virtue of its contribution to Falun’s innovative municipal energy system.

The EcoDataCenter facility will contribute waste heat to heat Falun’s homes and businesses via the city’s municipal heating system, while excess steam from the local municipal combined heat and power plant will help drive the data centre’s cooling systems, according to the project.

EcoDataCenter will make use of a local power plant, operated by the city, which derives power entirely from renewable sources, including solar, wind and hydro power, as well as biomass fuel – that is, burning branches and wood chips from forestry waste, sawdust from local saw mills and old wooden furniture to generate steam which, in turn, drives a turbine.

The 18-megawatt data center will also benefit from the city’s cool climate, which will provide free cooling from October to April, according to backers.

It is to comprise three buildings totaling 23,250m2 in all, with the first building set to begin operations in the first quarter of next year.

“The symbiosis between the data centre and our energy systems will reduce carbon emissions so much that…Futureover the course of a year, it will have a positive impact on the environment,” said Falu Energy & Water chief executive Bengt Gustafsson, in a statement. “We are building the world’s first climate-positive data centre.”

Greener means cheaper

EcoDC, the start-up that will operate the facility, said its power efficiency also adds up to lower operating costs.

“The data centre is significantly more energy efficient than regular data centres and the integration with the district heating and cooling system means that energy is used that otherwise would have been wasted,” stated EcoDC co-founder Børge Granli. “All of this lowers the costs both for us and for our clients.”

Schneider Electric is to supply technology and systems for the project. The companies released a YouTube video detailing EcoDataCenter ahead of its official launch at a planned public event on Thursday.

The backers also highlighted EcoDataCenter’s high safety specifications, which are to be ranked as Tier IV – a certification only held by 12 other data centres worldwide – and its high guaranteed uptime. The facility is to have a Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) rating of less than 1.15, with eco-friendly buildings certified as LEED-Platinum.

Do you know all about renewable energy? Take our quiz.

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

View Comments

Recent Posts

Elon Musk Issued Summons By SEC Over Failure To Disclose Twitter Stake

As Musk guts US federal agencies, SEC issues summons over Elon's failure to disclose ownership…

28 mins ago

Alphabet Spins Outs Taara To Challenge Musk’s Starlink

Moonshot project Taara spun out of Google, and uses lasers and not satellites to provide…

2 hours ago

Pebble Creator Debuts New Watches As ‘Labour Of Love’

Pebble creator launches two new PebbleOS-based smartwatches with 30-day battery life, e-ink screens after OS…

1 day ago

Amazon Loses Appeal To Record EU Privacy Fine

Amazon loses appeal in Luxembourg's administrative court over 746m euro GDPR fine related to use…

1 day ago

Nvidia, xAI Join BlackRock AI Infrastructure Project

Nvidia, xAI to participate in project backed by BlackRock, Microsoft to invest $100bn in AI…

1 day ago

Google Agrees To $28m Settlement In Bias Case

Google agrees to pay $28m to settle claims it offered higher pay and more opportunities…

1 day ago