Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use

Data centers are energy intensive buildings that have grown in size and number to meet the increasing demands of a digital economy. This paper presents a bottom-up model to estimate data center electricity demand in the United States over a 20 year period and examines observed and projected electric...

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Main Authors: Arman Shehabi, Sarah J Smith, Eric Masanet, Jonathan Koomey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2018-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaec9c
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author Arman Shehabi
Sarah J Smith
Eric Masanet
Jonathan Koomey
author_facet Arman Shehabi
Sarah J Smith
Eric Masanet
Jonathan Koomey
author_sort Arman Shehabi
collection DOAJ
description Data centers are energy intensive buildings that have grown in size and number to meet the increasing demands of a digital economy. This paper presents a bottom-up model to estimate data center electricity demand in the United States over a 20 year period and examines observed and projected electricity use trends in the context of changing data center operations. Results indicate a rapidly increasing electricity demand at the turn of the century that has significantly subsided to a nearly steady annual electricity use of about 70 billion kWh in recent years. While data center workloads continue to grow exponentially, comparable increases in electricity demand have been avoided through the adoption of key energy efficiency measures and a shift towards large cloud-based service providers. Alternative projections from the model illustrate the wide range in potential electricity that could be consumed to support data centers, with the US data center workload demand estimated for 2020 requiring a total electricity use that varies by about 135 billion kWh, depending on the adoption rate of efficiency measures during this decade. While recent improvements in data center energy efficiency have been a success, the growth of data center electricity use beyond 2020 is uncertain, as modeled trends indicate that the efficiency measures of the past may not be enough for the data center workloads of the future. The results show that successful stabilization of data center electricity will require new innovations in data center efficiency to further decouple electricity demand from the ever-growing demand for data center services.
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spelling doaj.art-36ac33c5dcc3424aa680770a8f9be3ec2023-08-09T14:40:15ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262018-01-01131212403010.1088/1748-9326/aaec9cData center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity useArman Shehabi0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1735-6973Sarah J Smith1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0179-4546Eric Masanet2Jonathan Koomey3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2983-344XEnergy Analysis & Environmental Impacts Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States of AmericaEnergy Analysis & Environmental Impacts Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States of AmericaMcCormick School of Engineering, Northwestern University , 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, IL 60208, United States of AmericaKoomey Analytics, PO Box 1545, Burlingame, CA 94011-1545, United States of AmericaData centers are energy intensive buildings that have grown in size and number to meet the increasing demands of a digital economy. This paper presents a bottom-up model to estimate data center electricity demand in the United States over a 20 year period and examines observed and projected electricity use trends in the context of changing data center operations. Results indicate a rapidly increasing electricity demand at the turn of the century that has significantly subsided to a nearly steady annual electricity use of about 70 billion kWh in recent years. While data center workloads continue to grow exponentially, comparable increases in electricity demand have been avoided through the adoption of key energy efficiency measures and a shift towards large cloud-based service providers. Alternative projections from the model illustrate the wide range in potential electricity that could be consumed to support data centers, with the US data center workload demand estimated for 2020 requiring a total electricity use that varies by about 135 billion kWh, depending on the adoption rate of efficiency measures during this decade. While recent improvements in data center energy efficiency have been a success, the growth of data center electricity use beyond 2020 is uncertain, as modeled trends indicate that the efficiency measures of the past may not be enough for the data center workloads of the future. The results show that successful stabilization of data center electricity will require new innovations in data center efficiency to further decouple electricity demand from the ever-growing demand for data center services.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaec9cinformation and communication technology (ICT)energy efficiencyenergy demand modelingdata centers
spellingShingle Arman Shehabi
Sarah J Smith
Eric Masanet
Jonathan Koomey
Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
Environmental Research Letters
information and communication technology (ICT)
energy efficiency
energy demand modeling
data centers
title Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
title_full Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
title_fullStr Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
title_full_unstemmed Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
title_short Data center growth in the United States: decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
title_sort data center growth in the united states decoupling the demand for services from electricity use
topic information and communication technology (ICT)
energy efficiency
energy demand modeling
data centers
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aaec9c
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