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| How AISO Is
100% Solar Powered |
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A lot of people
wonder and even speculate how AISO can be 100%
solar powered. Well we have taken a lot of steps
that normal hosting companies don't, to make
sure we can make such a claim true. We built our data center, network and servers from the start to use the lowest amount of energy possible using the latest green design techniques, no other hosting company can do what we do without starting from scratch. We have gone
beyond just making sure our electricity is
environmentally friendly.
First off, we
redesigned our data center to be environmentally
friendly along with allowing us to save as much
electricity as possible. We built our new data
center and office completely using steel except
for the door frames. We felt this would be the
most responsible construction method keeping
with our green philosophy. Next we used several
layers of environmentally friendly cellulose
(recycled paper) insulation to give us an
R-value equal to R 50. This high R-value keeps
the cool air in and the hot air out with a usual 20 degree or more difference between inside and outside air temperature, therefore
reducing the amount of energy necessary to run
our data center. Then, so we don't have to run
lighting during the day, the building is
complete with over 7
solar tubes, which bring in natural light
from the outside. To save energy during low
light hours and at night,
we use
LED lighting instead of Compact Fluorescent or Fluorescent Light Bulbs. This reduces electricity
usage and they contain no mercury. Compact
Fluorescent Light Bulbs and regular Fluorescent Light Bulbs contain mercury which
becomes a concern at landfills and trash
incinerators where the mercury from many bulbs
can escape and contribute to air and water
pollution. We also installed a custom power saving device which reduces the amount of power drawn by storing electricity that would be otherwise lost electricity (watts) caused by inductance (motors) in our cooling systems, data center and office. The technology applied by this special power saving device supplies stored electricity back to the inductive loads, thus causing a decrease in demand for electricity of up to 30% in reduced consumption. We are also in the process of designing a green
roof for our data center. The green roof is a
layer of dirt 3 to 4 inches thick with drought
resistant plants. Once the new green roof is
finished, it can reduce our cooling requirements by up to 50%. When finished, AISO
will be the first and only public data center in
North America with a green roof.
Next to reduce
electricity, we installed cooling systems that
are built by a company called
Freus, Inc and are energy star compliant. We
have also made a custom cooling exchanger that
brings in the cool air from outside when the
temperature drops to below 50°F degrees. This
exchanger sucks in the cool air from the outside
and then blows it back onto the data center
without the need for the Freus air units to run.
Only 3 amps of power are being used for the
energy efficient blower to run on cool nights. The Freus systems are
water-cooled air conditioning systems, that
based on test results are nearly twice as energy
efficient as conventional air-cooled systems
that normal data centers have.
To see more information on how our energy
efficient cooling systems work, click here.
Then to reduce electricity even further, we have
gone with a solution from
Sirius Computer Solutions, NetApp, IBM, and VMWare
that allows us to run hundreds of virtual
servers only on a dozen physical servers. Most
data centers experience "server sprawl" because
every time they get a new application, they run
it on its own server. So in the average data
center, the servers are running at 4 percent to
8 percent capacity. AISO saw this issue and
purchased a solution to stop it. Now, instead of assigning each
server an application or a task, virtualization lets us
put individual physical servers into their own
"virtual machines," increasing the physical
servers efficiency and shrinking our data
centers' server footprint. Many of the old
servers, assigned to an individual application
or dedicated customer, were being used at only 5
percent to 10 percent capacity. "I want them
spinning, not sleeping," says Phil Nail,
Director of Technology for AISO. "The goal is 70
to 75 percent utilization." Through this
virtualization process, AISO has cut their
physical server count over 95 percent. "A very
big part of this project's return on investment
[ROI] is energy and cooling," Nail says. "The
biggest projected savings is to avoid buying
more servers. Power was No. 2 on the ROI list,
he explained. "Each old server chewed up 400
watts of power. The new IBM servers might
consume 625 watts, but I am replacing 30 of the
old servers with one of these."
We also purchase IBM BladeCenter servers, which consume less then half the power. Fourteen of the regular 625 watt servers consumes 8,750 watts, where as fourteen comparable blade servers only consume 3,990 watts, that is 285 watts per server. Using blade servers also results in less heat, and therefore, less power spent on server-room cooling.
For more information on the blades and the IBM BladeCenter with AMD processors AISO uses, click here.
After AISO retires the old servers we take them down to a local EWaste Center to be disposed of properly, showing AISO is committed to environmental conservation.
To find out more about how our servers work,
click here.
To find out more
about how we are committed to helping the
environment, click here.
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