Somewhere In Georgia, A Flushed Toilet Is Helping Cool Google’s Servers


Facebook’s Arctic data centers and Google’s seawater server farms both tried to check the massive energy costs needed to keep their servers sufficiently cooled. Google’s Douglas County data centre has a similar idea — it just involves raw sewage.

When the data centre went online in 2007, it was fed with the same fresh-water supply as the rest of Douglas County. But Google’s heat sinks can’t tell the difference between Dom Perignon and rotgut so Google switched to a 100-percent recycled water supply.

Upstream from the data centre — literally further up the Chattahoochee River — lies the Douglas County Water Authority plant. It cleans the grey water from nearby towns and pumps it into the river. Google’s data centre siphons 30 per cent of that outflow before it hits the river and pumps it through its heat exchange system. Any water that doesn’t evaprate from the center’s massive cooling towers flows from the data centre and into a specially-built effluent treatment plant that Google constructed. This plant further cleans the water before flushing the clean water into the Chattahoochee.

According to Michael Patton, the deputy director of water and waste water operations for the WSA, “It’s a win-win for both us and for the community too.” Google gets free cooling while reducing its potable water consumption which frees up more for the rest of Douglas County during the hotter months. [Wired via ZDnet]



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