09:48 AM
HP Develops Manure-Powered Data Centers
Last May, Google announced that it was using a herd of goats to mow the lawn at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. This year, HP has taken the lead in innovative uses for livestock in business. Its researchers have come up with a way to power data centers with cow manure.A farm of 10,000 dairy cows could fulfill the power requirements of a 1-megawatt data center - a medium-sized data center - with power left over to support other needs on the farm, say the HP Labs researchers.
In this process, the heat generated by the data center can be used to increase the efficiency of the anaerobic digestion of animal waste. This results in the production of methane, which can be used to generate power for the data center. This symbiotic relationship allows the waste problems faced by dairy farms and the energy demands of the modern data center to be addressed in a sustainable manner.
HP offers some fun facts about cows and manure that you might not already know:
* The average dairy cow produces about 55 kg (120 pounds) of manure per day, and approximately 20 metric tons per year - roughly equivalent to the weight of four adult elephants.
* The manure that one dairy cow produces in a day can generate 3.0 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electrical energy, which is enough to power television usage in three U.S. households per day.
* A medium-sized dairy farm with 10,000 cows produces about 200,000 metric tons of manure per year. Approximately 70 percent of the energy in the methane generated via anaerobic digestion could be used for data center power and cooling, thus reducing the impact on natural resources.
* Pollutants from unmanaged livestock waste degrade the environment and can lead to groundwater contamination and air pollution. Methane is 21 times more damaging to the environment than carbon dioxide, which means that in addition to being an inefficient use of energy, disposal of manure through flaring can result in steep greenhouse gas emission taxes.
* In addition to benefiting the environment, using manure to generate power for data centers could provide financial benefit to farmers. HP researchers estimate that dairy farmers would break even in costs within the first two years of using a system like this and then earn roughly $2 million annually in revenue from selling waste-derived power to data center customers.
HP did not say when dung-powered data centers will be generally available, but you can read more about its cow power theories in this paper.