The life cycle assessment of a UK data centre

被引:31
|
作者
Whitehead, Beth [1 ,2 ]
Andrews, Deborah [1 ]
Shah, Amip [3 ]
机构
[1] LSBU, Fac Engn Sci & Built Environm, London SE1 0AA, England
[2] Operat Intelligence, Surrey KT2 5LF, England
[3] HP Labs, Palo Alto, CA 94304 USA
来源
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
Case study; Data centres; Hybrid LCA; LCA results and sensitivity; Life cycle assessment (LCA); Screening LCA; ENVIRONMENTAL-IMPACT; ENERGY; EFFICIENCY;
D O I
10.1007/s11367-014-0838-7
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Data centres are high-energy consumers, and historical assessment of their environmental impact has focused largely on energy consumption. Widely adopted assessment methods consider either single issues or do not comprehensively assess links between issues. One exception is the CLEER Model, which compares life cycle energy and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of Cloud-based and present-day services. However, there remains the need to verify components for inclusion in a data centre life cycle assessment (LCA), assess quality and quantity of secondary data, benchmark an existing data centre LCA, assess non-Cloud-based services for multiple impacts, and establish facility areas that are sensitive to change. A hybrid approach, combining process-based and economic input output (EIO) data, was used to perform the screening LCA of an existing UK data centre. The study includes the definition of the goal and scope, modelling assumptions, a life cycle inventory, results and interpretation and a sensitivity check. The dominance of the information technology (IT) operational phase to the overall impact and the severity of the impact on human health are concluded. Due to the use of free cooling, the IT-embodied impact is greater than the combined mechanical and electrical operational impact. Electricity production dominates the total life cycle impact; however, the second most significant impact derives from the disposal of metal refining waste products during the manufacture of IT components and electricity distribution networks. The release of carcinogens is one of the largest contributors to the whole life cycle impact and is almost equal in value between the embodied and operational phases. Finally, a sensitivity check found that a Swedish facility optimised for operational energy efficiency with a 1.25-year server refresh resulted in an embodied impact almost double the operational. It was concluded that current LCI data, software packages and project data allow for a sufficiently accurate data centre LCA model. The results support the need to broaden environmental impact reduction to beyond operational energy consumption for cooling and that building environmental assessment methods (BEAMs) should consider more embodied impacts. It is concluded also that three parameters are sensitive to design changes that influence the overall impact: operational energy for the IT equipment, cooling and power delivery; the energy mix; and the amount of IT equipment across the facility's lifetime. The results present a clear need to monitor life cycle impact, develop further tools to compare different design/operation options and functional units, improve data and develop an LCA-based BEAM.
引用
收藏
页码:332 / 349
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Life cycle assessment
    Duda, M
    Shaw, JS
    SOCIETY, 1997, 35 (01) : 38 - 43
  • [42] Life cycle assessment
    Mark Duda
    Jane S. Shaw
    Society, 1997, 35 : 38 - 43
  • [43] Life cycle assessment
    Engineering (London), 2 (26):
  • [44] Life cycle assessment
    Teulon, Helene
    Boidot-Forget, Marc
    Epelly, Olivier
    Automotive Engineering International, 1995, 103 (12): : 49 - 51
  • [45] Application of life cycle carbon assessment for a sustainable building design: a case study in the UK
    Brooks, Maria
    Abdellatif, Mawada
    Alkhaddar, Rafid
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GREEN ENERGY, 2021, 18 (04) : 351 - 362
  • [46] A Prospective Net Energy and Environmental Life-Cycle Assessment of the UK Electricity Grid
    Raugei, Marco
    Kamran, Mashael
    Hutchinson, Allan
    ENERGIES, 2020, 13 (09)
  • [47] A life cycle assessment of the construction phase of eleven micro-hydropower installations in the UK
    Ueda, T.
    Roberts, E. S.
    Norton, A.
    Styles, D.
    Williams, A. P.
    Ramos, H. M.
    Gallagher, J.
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2019, 218 : 1 - 9
  • [48] A cradle-to-customer life cycle assessment case study of UK vertical farming
    Gargaro, Michael
    Hastings, Astley
    Murphy, Richard J.
    Harris, Zoe M.
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2024, 470
  • [49] Uncertainty in Life-Cycle Assessment Induced by Life-Cycle Inventory Data: The Case of Structural Steel
    Zygomalas, Iordanis
    Baniotopoulos, Charalambos
    ENGINEERING JOURNAL-AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF STEEL CONSTRUCTION, 2013, 50 (02): : 117 - 128
  • [50] Erratum to: Criteria for the evaluation of life cycle assessment software packages and life cycle inventory data with application to concrete
    Mary Ann Curran
    The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment, 2017, 22 : 838 - 838