Energy Management shows up as a Vancouver Olympic event

CNET news has a post on the Vancouver Olympics reporting on the energy consumption from Olympic buildings.

A new Olympic sport: Tracking building energy

by Martin LaMonica

While people are watching the Olympic Games, building managers will be watching their energy dashboards.

Energy management software company Pulse Energy on Friday showed off an energy-monitoring system developed to make the Olympic Games in Vancouver more efficient.

Building energy is the latest spectator sport in Vancouver.

(Credit: Screenshot by Martin LaMonica/CNET)

The software gives facilities managers a real-time readout of energy consumption at different venues. By tracking that data, building managers can make adjustments to save energy, such as turning off equipment that's not in use. The information is also available online at VenueEnergyTracker.com.

BC Hydro has been trying to attract data centers to the BC area.

Here is more information about VenueEnergyTracker.

about the venue energy tracker

BC Hydro and the Vancouver Organizing Committee of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) created the Venue Energy Tracker to showcase the innovative sustainability measures implemented in various 2010 Winter Games venues and associated sites through an energy management software.

challenge

The communities involved were challenged with producing world class facilities with a minimal environmental footprint, while maximizing the long term legacies for their residents. The Venue Energy Tracker communicates the energy consumption and savings being realized by various partner venue buildings.

actions

Employing the latest in energy management software technology, BC Hydro with the energy tracking software tracks, analyzes and reports on real-time energy consumption from the venue sites in order to see energy and green house gas savings and set benchmarks from which similar venues can compare themselves to.

Learning from past Games, applying best practices in green design, construction, and occupant engagement, the communities were able to mitigate local and global sustainability challenges and embrace opportunities to make a difference. Actions taken include implementing green building features, including but not limited to: implementing energy saving technology, sequestering BC Pine Beetle wood as a construction material, rainwater capture and reuse, waste heat reuse, targeting LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) building certification, and incorporating green principles and practices into operations and events.

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Facebook Prineville Data Center Announcement Pictures

Here is something you don’t see from the other Data Center ceremonies a bunch of pictures on Facebook.

If you are looking for the news on the site go here /2010/01/facebook-data-center-115-pue.html.

Here the execs who get there ceremonial ground breaking photos.

image  And, here are the engineers.  On the right is Amir Michael, ex-Google data center hw engineer.

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From a PR pespective look at the numbers in less than 24 hours.

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Where is Prineville in Oregon?

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Here is Central Oregon Economic Development President Roger Lee and Facebook’s Director of Site Operations Tom Furlong.

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And more pictures.

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In these pictures were no vendors or contractor logos just Facebook.  Good job on their PR team to make the Facebook logo standout.

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Facebook Data Center, 1.15 PUE

Just added some pictures from the ground breaking ceremony /2010/01/facebook-prineville-data-center-announcement-pictures.html

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Facebook and Prineville, OR officials have made the announcement Facebook is building a data center.  Let’s bounce around to the various news reports.

To start i like KTVZ.com post, because it gave a link to the Facebook site about the data center.

Hundreds of construction jobs, 35 permanent ones come to Prineville as Facebook builds its first owned data center (artist's rendering-Sheehan Partners Ltd.)

Hundreds of construction jobs, 35 permanent ones come to Prineville as Facebook builds its first owned data center (artist's rendering-Sheehan Partners Ltd.)

It will be first owned by Internet social-networking giant

From KTVZ.COM news sources

Gov. Ted Kulongoski announced Thursday that Facebook, the world's leading social networking service, with more than 350 million users, will locate a multi-million dollar data center in Prineville.

The months-long secret was revealed at a midday announcement at the 124-acre site near the Prineville airport, on the west side of town. Here's the rest of the governor's announcement, followed by Facebook's own 'fact sheets' about the project:

More information about the project as well as ongoing updates will be available athttp://Facebook.com/prinevilledatacenter.

So when you to the Facebook site.

Prineville Data Center

Prineville Data Center

Economic Impact

Economic Impact It is Facebook’s hope that the construction, staffing and supplying of the Prineville Data Center will have a positive impact on the Crook County/Prineville economy. ...

January 11 at 5:21pm · Comment · Like · Share

Susie Dill Atlee likes this.

Prineville Data Center

Prineville Data Center

Environmental Practices

Environmental Practices Fact Sheet Facebook’s Prineville Data Center, the first built and owned by the company, will be a leader in the data center industry in terms of reduced environmental impact and energy use. ...

January 11 at 5:19pm · Comment · Like · Share

Prineville Data Center

Prineville Data Center

What is a data center?

A data center is just what the name implies: a central location that houses thousands of computer servers, which are networked together and then linked to the outside world through fiber optic cable...

December 13, 2009 at 8:54pm · Comment · Like · Share

RECENT ACTIVITY

Focusing on Green Data Center area Facebook reports.

Environmental Practices

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Monday, January 11, 2010 at 5:19pm

Environmental Practices Fact Sheet
Facebook’s Prineville Data Center, the first built and owned by the company, will be a leader in the data center industry in terms of reduced environmental impact and energy use. Facebook is committed to operating sustainably and has vigorously pursued new technologies to meet that commitment. The data center will also be Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certified.
Energy Use
The Prineville Data Center will be one of the most energy efficient facilities of its kind in the world.
Energy use in the data centers is measured in terms of power usage effectiveness (“PUE”), which is determined by dividing the amount of power entering a data center by the power used to run the computers in it. A typical data center has an average PUE of 1.8. This means that for every 1.8 watts that go through the utility meter, one watt is delivered to the computer infrastructure.
Facebook’s Prineville Data Center will use a number of technologies to achieve a power usage effectiveness ratio of 1.15.
The new, energy-efficiency technologies Facebook will utilize here include:
• Evaporative cooling system – This system uses evaporation of water to achieve cooling as opposed to the more traditional chiller systems that requires more energy intensive equipment. It is anticipated this facility will use this process approximately 60% to 70% of the year. For other times, outside air economizer mode will be used.
• Airside economizer – The facility will be cooled by simply bringing in colder air from the outside. During low humidity times of the year, the evaporative cooling system will be used to meet server humidity range requirements.
• Re-use of server heat – A portion of the excess heat created by the computer servers will be captured and re-used to heat office space in the facility during the colder months.
• Proprietary Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) Technology – All data centers must have an uninterruptible power supply to bridge the gap between a power outage and the ability of backup generators to kick-in. The Prineville Data Center will use a new, patent-pending system for UPS that reduces electricity usage by up to 12 percent.
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Certification
The Prineville Data Center is being designed to achieve the USBGC LEED Gold level certification. In addition to the industry-leading energy efficiency designed into the facility, the data center will also feature:
• Use of rainwater to maintain landscaping and for gray water use in the facility.
• Use of low Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) finish materials.
• Use of Energy Star Compliant appliances.
• Use of low water consumption technologies such as automated faucets and low flush toilets.

DataCenterKnowledge will most likely get the highest traffic with its post.

It’s Official: Facebook is Oregon’s Company X

January 21st, 2010 : Rich Miller

An architectural rendering of the new Facebook data center planned for Prineville, Oregon.

An architectural rendering of the new Facebook data center planned for Prineville, Oregon.

Facebook’s first company-built data center will be in Prineville, Oregon, the company confirmed today. The new facility will be among the most energy efficient in the industry, Facebook said, and will provide the social network with headroom for its fast-growing server and storage infrastructure.

DataCenterDynamics mentions evaporative cooling and heat recovery.

Facebook data center to use evaporative cooling; server heat will warm offices

there is a Facebook blog post by Jonathan Heigler, VP of Operations as well.

Breaking Ground on Our First Custom Data Center

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by Jonathan Heiliger Today at 10:24am

We have come a long way from our roots in a Harvard dorm room, when Facebook was only available at some colleges and run on a single server. Now with more than 350 million people worldwide and our service and business continuing to grow, we must constantly scale our technical infrastructure to meet the demand and deliver you a fast, reliable experience. An important step along the way is to build a custom data center so that we can design it to meet our unique needs.

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Nokia adopts Google’s Free business model for navigation

BusinessWeek has an article on Nokia’s latest move to provide free navigation tools.

Nokia Challenges Google With Free Navigation Tool (Update1)

January 21, 2010, 01:36 PM EST

By Diana ben-Aaron

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Nokia Oyj, the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, is offering navigation on its Ovi Maps service free, challenging smartphones using Google Inc. software.

“This will help us defend our selling price for products that contain global positioning system technology,” Anssi Vanjoki, executive vice president of marketing at the Espoo, Finland-based company, said in a telephone interview.

What else is interesting is the statement by Nokia’s CEO.

Internet Services

Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo aims to build the world’s biggest mobile Internet services platform to protect market share and create new revenue streams. The company is trying different payment models including bundling with consumer handsets and pay-per-download. Google also has a diversified services business model, with most of its revenue coming from advertising.

Nokia made a good move buying Navteq in 2008.

Nokia bought Chicago-based Navteq in 2008, acquiring a maps database to compete with Google’s maps as well as with navigation device companies such as TomTom NV and Garmin Ltd. The Finnish company’s smartphone market share fell three percentage points to 39.3 percent in the third quarter, according to Gartner Inc. figures, as Google drove into mobile handsets with its Android software.

“They’re in a race with Google to get lots of users onto their service as social networking creates new business models,” said Martin Garner, a London-based analyst with CCS Insight. “Google’s linked its maps to advertising and advertising can only come if you have a lot of users.”

I had just read The Economist article on Nokia.

Nokia tries to reinvent itself

Bears at the door

Can the world’s largest handset-maker regain the initiative?

Jan 7th 2010 | ESPOO
From The Economist print edition

Illustration by Claudio Munoz

ASK Finns about their national character and chances are the word sisu will come up. It is an amalgam of steadfastness and diligence, but also courage, recklessness and fierce tenacity. “It takes sisu to stand at the door when the bear is on the other side,” a folk saying goes.

There are plenty of bears these days at the doors of Nokia, the Finnish firm that is the world’s biggest maker of mobile handsets. Although it is still the global leader in the fast-growing market for smart-phones, its devices are losing ground to Apple’s iPhone and to the BlackBerry, made by Research in Motion (RIM). On January 5th Google took a further step into the market with the launch of the Nexus One, a handset made by HTC of Taiwan that the internet giant will sell directly to consumers, and which runs Android, Google’s operating system for smart-phones.

Despite this situation morale is reported to be high at Nokia.

Yet in Nokia’s headquarters in Espoo, near Helsinki, morale is far better than one might expect. Hardly anyone would deny that there are problems. But executives insist that they can be overcome. When board members met financial analysts in December, they made some bold predictions. Within a year, promised Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, the firm’s boss, the ageing Symbian software will have been vastly improved, to enable Nokia to offer “magic devices”. As for services, the goal is to have signed up 300m users by the end of 2011. “I’ve rarely heard such explicit statements," says Ben Wood of CCS Insight, a long-time Nokia watcher.

The company is changing.

All this will no doubt help Nokia come up with better, if not magic, products. The firm may even reach its goal of 300m users by the end of 2011 because its efforts are not aimed just at rich countries, but at fast-growing emerging economies where Nokia is still king of the hill, such as India. There, services such as Nokia Money, a mobile-payment system, and Life Tools, which supplies farmers with prices and other information, fulfil real needs, says John Delaney of IDC, another market-research firm.

Here is something didn’t know about Nokia.  It’s origin is 1865 as a paper mill.

Yet it is an entirely different question whether Nokia will manage to dominate the mobile industry once more—not just by handset volumes, but by innovation and profits. The example of the computer industry, in which the centre of gravity began shifting from hardware firms to providers of software and services over two decades ago, is not terribly encouraging: of the industry’s former giants, only IBM really made the shift successfully. Then again, Nokia has reinvented itself many times since its origin in 1865 as a paper mill. That, points out Dan Steinbock, the author of two books on the firm, is thanks not only tosisu, but also to a remarkable willingness to embrace change and diversity. Nokia will need those traits in the years ahead.

I made the mistake of thinking of Apple, Google, and RIM as the smartphone market.  Nokia shouldn’t be discounted out.  And, Microsoft’s mobile group isn’t going to give up either.

The mobile device market connected to data center services is the fastest growing market.  So, no one is give up the fight as long as they have the resources to invest.

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