Green Is a Compiler
The standard green data center question is: Is this facility green?
That is the wrong question. Too easy to answer badly.
The better question is: Can these green conditions be sustained?
That is a compiler question. A compiler takes declared inputs, checks them against rules, and returns a verdict — not a score, not a certification. A gate decision: PASS, FAIL, or UNKNOWN.
Green = Sustainable
Green means sustainable.
Not efficient today. Not renewable on paper. Not carbon neutral by accounting convention.
Sustainable means the conditions that make the facility green can be held over time, as the world changes around it. That one move changes everything — because a lot of things that currently pass as green stop compiling.
Lowest energy use may not be sustainable. A facility running PUE 1.05 on free-air cooling is impressively efficient. But some of that efficiency is borrowed from the climate envelope around it. If that envelope shifts over the operating life of the building, the free-air window narrows and the PUE climbs. The efficiency was not built into the system. It was leased from the atmosphere.
Renewable may not be sustainable. Hydro depends on watershed conditions. Solar depends on manufacturing, degradation, and end-of-life. Wind depends on grid integration and geography. RECs are accounting tools, not physical supply by themselves — a REC can match consumption on paper while the facility draws fossil generation at 2am. The electrons do not care about the certificate.
None of this means renewable energy is bad. It means the sustainability compile is more demanding than the green checklist.
Compiler Outputs
PASS — the claim holds across the declared time horizon, boundary, and stress conditions.
FAIL — the claim does not hold, or a prohibited dependency appears.
UNKNOWN — the witnesses are missing. The compile cannot run.
UNKNOWN is not a soft PASS.
What the Compile Checks
For GreenM3DC, the compile uses four structural checks.
INV — what must remain true
PUE must remain below a declared threshold, measured at the meter, not modeled at design. Renewable fraction must be matched to actual consumption, not just annual average. Carbon accounting must close within a declared reporting window.
NINV — what must never occur
Fossil fuel must not become the primary power source while the facility still claims to be green. Cooling capacity must not fall below heat load — thermal runaway is not a warning, it is a compile failure. Carbon neutrality must not rest entirely on purchased offsets with no internal reduction pathway.
BOUND — where the claim holds
Free-air cooling efficiency is valid only within a declared ambient range. Outside that range the PUE claim does not compile — the model has left its boundary. The renewable claim holds at this grid location, with these generation sources, under these matching rules — not universally.
MORPH — what must be able to change
When ambient conditions exceed the free-air cooling threshold, the mode must shift from free-air to mechanical cooling. That transition must be declared and tested, not assumed. When the primary renewable source degrades, there must be a declared substitution path — not a future intention, a structural commitment.
These are four examples — one per category. The full GreenM3DC compile is built to run over dozens of tests across the same four categories.
The point here is the structure. The list is the work.
Most facilities would not return PASS or FAIL on this compile. They would return UNKNOWN.
Not because they are failing, but because the witnesses are missing. No declared time horizon. No stress scenario. No lifecycle assessment of the hardware fleet.
UNKNOWN is not green. UNKNOWN is not sustainable.
Can you run this compile?
INV PUE_THRESHOLD · RENEWABLE_MATCH · CARBON_WINDOW
NINV FOSSIL_PRIMARY · COOLING_FLOOR · OFFSET_ONLY
BOUND FREE_AIR_ENVELOPE · RENEWABLE_LOCALITY · LOAD_DENSITY
MORPH COOLING_MODE_SHIFT · SOURCE_SUBSTITUTION · HARDWARE_EOL
Next: The IT asset list as structural input — what the BOM actually tells you about whether a facility can be sustained.