4.6 Article

Consequences of Future Data Center Deployment in Canada on Electricity Generation and Environmental Impacts A 2015-2030 Prospective Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 1312-1322

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.12515

Keywords

consequential prospective LCA; industrial ecology; information and communications technology (ICT); life cycle assessment (LCA); marginal electricity; partial equilibrium energy model

Funding

  1. NSERC of Canada [CRDPJ 424371-11]

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The environmental impacts of data centers that provide information and communication technologies (ICTs) services are strongly related to electricity generation. With the increasing use of ICT, many data centers are expected to be built, causing more absolute impacts on the environment. Given that electricity distribution networks are very complex and dynamic systems, an environmental evaluation of future data centers is uncertain. This study proposes a new approach to investigate the consequences of future data center deployment in Canada and optimize this deployment based on the Energy 2020 technoeconomic model in combination with life cycle assessment methodology. The method determines specific electricity sources that will power the future Canadian data centers and computes related environmental impacts based on several indicators. In case-study scenarios, the largest deployment of data centers leads to the smallest impact per megawatt of data centers for all of the environmental indicators. It is found that an increase in power demand by data centers would lead to a reduction in electricity exports to the United States, driving the United States to generate more electricity to meet its energy demand. Given that electricity generation in the United States is more polluting than in Canada, the deployment of data centers in Canada is indirectly linked to an increase in overall environmental impacts. However, though an optimal solution should be found to mitigate global greenhouse gas emissions, it is not clear whether the environmental burden related to U.S. electricity generation should be attributed to the Canadian data centers.

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