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Data centre water consumption

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-021-00101-w

What is this?

This is an open access full-text version of the article detailed below. The original LaTeX source file is included. There is a major problem with the lifespan of references, so copies of all citations are also included in their state when originally accessed.

Abstract

The information communication technology sector will experience huge growth over the coming years, with 29.3 billion devices expected online by 2030, up from 18.4 billion in 2018. To reliably support the online services used by these billions of users, data centres have been built around the world to provide the millions of servers they contain with access to power, cooling and internet connectivity. Whilst the energy consumption of these facilities regularly receives mainstream and academic coverage, analysis of their water consumption is scarce. Data centres consume water directly for cooling, in some cases 57% sourced from potable water, and indirectly through the water requirements of non-renewable electricity generation. Although in the USA, data centre water consumption (1.7 billion litres/day) is small compared to total water consumption (1218 billion litres/day), there are issues of transparency with less than a third of data centre operators measuring water consumption. This paper examines the water consumption of data centres, the measurement of that consumption, highlights the lack of data available to assess water efficiency, and discusses and where the industry is going in attempts to reduce future consumptio

Citation

Mytton, D. Data centre water consumption. npj Clean Water 4, 11 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-021-00101-w

License

This article is published under the CC-BY-4.0 license. Copies of the references in this repository are subject to their original content licenses and are included here under fair-use provisions for education.