Solar renewable energy generation drives desert areas closer to Peak Water

WSJ has an opinion article on Peak Water issues caused by solar power mandates.  For more in depth of the comparison of the term Peak Water vs. Peak Oil check out this pdf.

Peak Water
Meena Palaniappan and Peter H. Gleick


In the past few years, discussions about the possibility of resource crises around water, energy, and food have introduced new terms and concepts into the public debate. Energy experts predict that the world is approaching, or has even passed, the point of maximum production of oil, or “peak oil.” The implications of reaching this point for energy policy are profound, for a range of economic, political, and environmental reasons. More recently, there has been a growing discussion of whether we are also approaching a comparable point of “peak water,” at which we run up against natural limits to availability or human use of freshwater.

Back to the WSJ Article.

Peak Water

An unintended consequence of solar power mandates.

Harry Reid has decided that Senate Democrats will put off their cap-and-tax energy ambitions for now, focusing on smaller-scale subsidies and mandates. Anyone who thinks this counts as a "compromise" might visit Arizona, where the green campaign for renewable energy is forcing the state to confront the limits of a nonrenewable resource—water.

With more than 10 months of sun a year and vast tracts of desert, Arizona is seemingly ideal for solar power, aside from the fact that solar isn't cost-competitive with conventional fuels. So, in a preview of the "renewable portfolio standard" that Democrats want to impose nationwide, the state mandated that utilities produce 15% of their electricity from green sources by 2025. Scores of solar projects are thus under review by federal and state regulators, with some of the applications fast-tracked so developers can qualify for tax credits in the stimulus.

What is not common public knowledge is the relationship between energy and water in power production.  Australia has a study that shows the relationship that I posted on last year.  I think the Australians learned this as part of when a desalination plant was built to be powered by a coal power plant.  You can guess when you account for the fresh water use by the power plant, the amount of energy required to generate fresh water through desalination, the economics and environmental impact didn't work.

Looking at the big picture of the relationship between water and solar power is in the WSJ article.

One hitch: The hot, arid regions best suited for solar also tend to be short on fresh water, and Arizona is no exception. Utility-scale solar power works by generating steam that spins turbines. Cooling the system at the end of the process consumes almost twice as much water per megawatt hour as coal-fired power plants that use the same cooling technology, according to a 2009 report from the Congressional Research Service. The study, which examined the consequences of a solar expansion in the southwest, adds that it could consume as much as 1% of the state's finite water resources within a few years.

The environmentalists answer is to not use steam, but photovoltaic.

Environmentalists say other solar methods require less water, but these aren't as efficient for generating power and they raise costs even more than the usual solar process. At any rate, Arizona is already an electricity exporter, mostly to California, so it isn't as if energy is in short supply. The state's green regulations are effectively a mandate to export water, which is in short supply.

The greens also claim that advanced photovoltaic solar farms (which convert sunlight directly into electricity with de minimis water) are just around the corner. But photovoltaic technology is no closer to commercial scale than cellulosic ethanol, plug-in vehicles and the other "second generation" science projects that environmentalists claim are just five years off to excuse the shortcomings of technologies as they exist today. They're always just five years off no matter what year it is, in order to justify continued subsidies.

Issues like this are why I say it is difficult to define a green data center.  A better method is to take the steps to make things greener. 

Green energy has been sold as a great free lunch, promising millions of new jobs and cheap electricity, but somehow it never turns out that way when you look under the hood.

The greenest data center is the one that doesn't exist and has no environmental impact.  But, I am not going to take that radical environmentalist view.  Cloud computing getting people to be charged for their usage in real-time is a great step to get people to see the costs of their technical and business decisions to run information services.

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Unknown Environmental Impact of Dam Removal

Data Centers built next to dams are assumed to have low cost power using renewable energy.  In the Pacific Northwest, Hydroelectric is not classified as renewable energy, and dams are viewed by many environmentalists as damaging.

A year from now the largest dam removal project will start on the Elwha River in the pacific Northwest. There are many environmentalists who champion dam removal.

Many of the dams in the eastern U.S. were built for water diversion, agriculture, factory watermills, and other purposes that are no longer useful. Because of the age of these dams, over time the risk for catastrophic failure increases. In addition, many of these dams block anadromous fish runs, such as Atlantic salmon and American shad, and prevent important sediments from reaching estuaries.

Many dams in the western U.S. were built for agricultural water diversion in the arid country, with hydroelectric power generation being a very significant side benefit. Among the largest of these water diversion projects is the Columbia Basin Project, which diverts water at the Grand Coulee Dam. The Bureau of Reclamation manages many of these water diversion projects.

Dams in the Pacific Northwest and California block passage for anadromous fish species such as Pacific Salmon and Steelhead. Fish laddersand other passage facilities have been largely ineffective in mitigating the negative effects on salmon populations. Bonneville Power Administration manages electricity on 11 dams on the Columbia River and 4 on the Snake River, which were built by the Army Corps of Engineers.

Seattletimes covers the largest dam removal project scheduled to start next year.

Elwha River's coming dam removal has scientists flooded with unknowns

Scientists see much to learn when two dams come down on the Elwha River, beginning about a year from now in the largest dam removal project ever in North America

By Lynda V. Mapes

Seattle Times staff reporter

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ELWHA RIVER, Clallam County — From all over the country they came to ponder this river: its gravel, its teal-green waters, its shores and mouth and mostly its future as the site of the largest dam-removal project ever in North America.

Sweeping north from Mount Olympus to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the Elwha has been collared by two dams since the early part of the 20th century. Both will be taken out chunk by chunk, releasing some 18 million cubic yards of sediment impounded along with the river's flow. The process will take about three years, beginning next June.

With $350 million allocated for the project.  There is no money for scientific research in the budget.

Oddly, for its importance, Elwha research is a shoestring effort. The $350 million federally funded restoration project includes no money for scientific study. So as they toured the river corridor, the scientists were framing potential research questions to propose for funding by agencies, universities and other sources.

The environmental impact of dam removal at this scale is unknown.

"It's the first time anyone has done a staged, step-by-step dam removal of this scale," Randle said. "It's the largest controlled release of sediment ever in North America, and a very different process than we've seen elsewhere."

So how do you the decision makers and environmentalists know the dam removal is better for the environment?  It would seem logical that how the dam gets removed has a huge influence on the impacts to issues brought up in the article.

"We built a model of this, but I've never actually stood on it," said Gordon Grant, research hydrologist with the U.S. Forest Service research station in Corvallis, Ore. "How does the river adjust to the change in level? You have a tiger by the tail, and the only knob you have to turn is how quickly you take it down. What's upstream will drive what is downstream, and that is what makes this such a juicy problem.

"I can't think of another analogue anywhere for the experiment this river is going to be. It's a natural laboratory unlike any other."

It will take three years to remove the dam and many more years to see the environmental impact.

What is environmental impact of dam removal?  We don't know.

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Santa Clara Valley Water District restricts water use

Water is a topic that few discuss in data centers, but more and more thanks to companies like Google and data center leaders like Mike Manos water is discussed much more than 2 years ago.  Water is a category I added from the beginning to this Green Data Center blog.

I am in SJ for the last few days, and the SJ Mercury had the Water Crisis Over? on the front page.

Water crisis over? Everywhere in the Bay Area but Santa Clara County

By Paul Rogers

progers@mercurynews.com

Posted: 06/15/2010 06:24:25 PM PDT

Updated: 06/15/2010 09:04:58 PM PDT

Grass is green. Reservoirs are brimming. Rainfall in San Jose is 114 percent of normal. The Sierra was thick with snow all spring.

Yet, despite the wettest spring since 2006, Silicon Valley's largest water provider on Tuesday voted to keep in place mandatory water conservation measures for this summer, becoming the only Bay Area water agency to demand reductions from the public this year rather than asking for voluntary savings.

"Don't be fooled by the rain. Our worries aren't over," said Dick Santos, chairman of the Santa Clara Valley Water District board. "From now on, conservation is a way of life. We have the same amount of water today as when Adam and Eve were on Earth. Now we have billions of

One of these days water conservation will be a standard practice for the majority of data centers.  Don't just think of the cost of the water and sewage, but the risks to your data center operations for a given amount of water use?  I bet most data centers would run out of water before power if the facility was islanded due to utility infrastructure failure.  The trucking in of diesel for generators is manageable.  Trucking in water could be a magnitude more .

Water is one of the most under appreciated Earth's resources. 

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Connecting Manure, Water, and EPA - Amish face regulation

HP made news with its Manure powered data center.

NYTimes has an article on how the EPA is looking at the manure from Amish farmers and water pollution.

But farmers like Mr. Stoltzfus are facing growing scrutiny for agricultural practices that the federal government sees as environmentally destructive. Their cows generate heaps of manure that easily washes into streams and flows onward into the Chesapeake Bay.

And the Environmental Protection Agency, charged by President Obama with restoring the bay to health, is determined to crack down. The farmers have a choice: change the way they farm or face stiff penalties.

“There’s much, much work that needs to be done, and I don’t think the full community understands,” said David McGuigan, the E.P.A. official leading an effort by the agency to change farming practices here in Lancaster County.

There is an extremely low chance that HP could talk to the Amish to solve their manure problems with a data center.

Water supply is what has the EPA looking at the Amish.

Last September, Mr. McGuigan and his colleagues visited 24 farms in a pocket of Lancaster County known as Watson’s Run to assess their practices. Twenty-three of the farms were plain sect; 17 were found to be managing their manure inadequately. The abundance of manure was also affecting water quality. Six of the 19 wells sampled contained E. coli bacteria, and 16 had nitrate levels exceeding those allowed by the E.P.A.

Water is one of the most under appreciated earth resources, and thankfully the momentum continues to build to protect it.

If you don't think about how water use and how water waste affects your data center, get ready for a potential visit from a regulatory agency.

Are you acting like an Amish farmer who is stuck in the past?

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Breaking the rules for Data Center Site Selection, HP discusses Farm Waste as energy supply

One of the smart people I get to have regular conversations with is Pat Kennedy, Founder and CEO of OSIsoft.  Pat is the one who got me thinking about green data centers when he asked a simple question three years ago, "how do you measure the power consumption of an application in a data center?"  This got me started down a whole path of monitoring and modeling.

One of the latest topics Pat and I have discussed is MicroGrids.  Google thinks about this too.  See this Google video, I can see some of the Google data center team in the audience.

HP is making news today with their paper on a microgrid for data centers powered by cow manure.

image

ABSTRACT
In this paper, we design a supply-side infrastructure for data centers that runs primarily on energy from digested farm waste. Although the information technology and livestock industries may seem completely disjoint, they have complementary characteristics that we exploit for mutual benefit. In particular, the farm waste fuels a combined heat and power system. The data center consumes the power, and its waste heat feeds back into the combined system. We propose a resource management system to manage the resource flows and effluents, and evaluate the direct and indirect economic benefits. As an example, we explain how a hypothetical farm of 10,000 dairy cows could fulfill the power requirements of a 1MW data center.

Pat Kennedy long ago was making the point that data centers could be a lot efficient if sites were chosen to be next to power generation, biomass, and/or other large consumer of power.  But, this idea is controversial in that a standard practice for data center risk reduction to place data centers far away from hazardous materials.  I think a large methane store would typically get classified as a risk to a data center.  So, if you are totally risk averse and don't pay for the power bill, why not skip over the site with methane.  Most would.

Plus there are risks that HP doesn't mention in their brief statement on financial and associated risks.

Financial cost and associated risks are perhaps the most
important consideration. Existing farms that have invested in
supply-side infrastructure often do so only if a power-purchase
agreement can be signed. Otherwise, the return could be too
speculative to justify the capital investment. A data center has substantial, continuous, and long-term power needs. Thus the data center owner could sign the power purchase agreement and provide the assured return desired by the farmer.

You are now dependent on a Farm.  What is the #1 risk to your manure production?  Water!!!  When there is a drought there is an impact to agriculture production and cattle need a lot of water.  This article says it takes 2,000 gallons of water to make a gallon of milk.

It can take up to 2,000 gallons of water to produce one gallon of milk. The cow needs water to perform basic biological functions from day to day, and only a fraction of the water the cow consumes is actually converted into milk. The fact that it takes so much water to produce cow's milk means that anytime you or any consumer chooses to drink milk, the burden you place on the natural environment is a thousand times greater than if you were to consume water itself. Drinking one gallon of milk is like pouring 1,999 gallons of fresh water down the drain.

Actually putting a data center in operation using a Farm has these risks like water and methane gas.  There are a bunch of other issues that can be addressed like water. 

Mike Manos and I regularly discuss that water is the next scarce resource for data centers.  Be careful not thinking about the secondary and tertiary affects of a change in the water supply.

I congratulate the guys at HP for creating more awareness that a microgrid data center strategy has merit.

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