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  3. There's a lot of stuff going around about datacenters, so I decided to do a quick tour yesterday of some of the datacenters in the Salt Lake Valley.

There's a lot of stuff going around about datacenters, so I decided to do a quick tour yesterday of some of the datacenters in the Salt Lake Valley.

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  • richardinsandy@c.imR richardinsandy@c.im

    @ricci I am reminded of a story that I think Kurt Vonnegut told about his brother. Someone commented that the brother’s desk was a mess. He gestured to his head and said ‘If you think this desk is a mess, you should see what it’s like in here’.

    ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
    ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
    ricci@discuss.systems
    wrote last edited by
    #57

    @richardinsandy my collection of spherical objects is clearly visible, dunno what that says about what's in my head

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

      The reason I went on this little tour was to put in perspective the proposed Stratos datacenter project in Box Elder County, UT.

      Stratos is supposedly designed to eventually reach a size of 9 GW. That is more than double the 4 GW that the entire state of Utah currently uses. The entire campus is supposed to be big enough that, for comparison, it would fill over 10% of the Salt Lake Valley, as shown in this image (which I didn't make).

      That last datacenter campus? At ~160 MW, those three buildings put together are designed for a load about 1/55th the size of Stratos. That 300 MW natural gas power station we saw in the background? Stratos is supposed to generate its own power on-site, so it will need 30 of those things. (Or maybe more - remember PUE?)

      In terms of carbon output, this thing is designed to be an absolute monster.

      There's not much getting around that. They have handwaved about including solar and/or wind, but without anything concrete, we should assume this is a whole lot of carbon.

      How about water?

      Well, that's harder to tell, given all the vagaries and "if"s in the public information so far.

      Remember, a datacenter has to get rid of a lot of heat. A datacenter that is generating its own energy on-site has to get rid of *far* more heat.

      In the desert West, the most *energy* efficient way of getting rid of heat in the hot summer months is evaporative cooling: you boil water. This has, historically, been a major way of cooling both natural gas plants and datacenters, as well as homes, etc.

      The same reason why this works well in the west is the same reason why it's problematic: we have very dry air, so evaporative cooling is very effective, but having dry air is connected to the fact that we don't have much water to begin with.

      There *are* ways to air-cool natural gas turbines, and there *are* ways to cool datacenters that are not evaporative cooling. They are more *water* efficient. But they are less *power* efficient, which means, in this context, burning even more natural gas.

      The backers of Stratos claim that they are trying to get some very new, high-tech gas turbines that operate without water cooling, or at least with very little. That does assuage some water concerns. But their language is very hedge-y - they're trying, they hope to jump in line for the limited supply of them, etc.

      They also claim they will use "closed loop" water systems for cooling the datacenter. There are several things this *could* mean, and we need to know more in order to actually understand it. Most cooling systems for datacenters and even large buildings have a closed loop of water (or another coolant) for moving heat around. That's because we cannot *make* cold, we can only *move* heat. In some datacenters, this cold loop comes into the room, where it's used to cool air, which is blown across the servers. In higher-power-density datacenters, the coolant loop comes all the way to the individual rack in order to cool the air right before it enters the servers. In the most high-tech datacenters (which Stratos would likely be), it comes all the way *inside* the server, directly exchanging heat with the hot bits like CPUs and GPUs.

      Coolant in these kinds of systems circulates, it's closed, you can generally consider the coolant loop to consume very little to no water after it's been filled.

      But: you still have to make the heat go away somehow. This is where Stratos *might* use evaporative cooling. Or they might opt for one of the more expensive, less energy efficient dry systems. Saying "we have a closed loop" only tells us *part* of the story!

      Here's what we know: the Stratos people have secured 13,000 acre-feet of water rights. In numbers that mean more to most of us, that's about 4 billion gallons per year.

      They *claim* that's far more water than they need, and they won't use most of it.

      But: if they don't manage to get their air-cooled gas turbines (which, in addition to being less efficient, also cost more), or decide to go with some evaporative cooling for the datacenter (because it's cheaper and uses less power), they could very easily use that much water. We are very much in a "trust me" situation, and it's not clear that we *should* trust what developers say when they are trying to get permits. We need to get independent studies and binding contracts.

      For those who aren't locals, you might not be aware, but: the Great Salt Lake is shrinking. People are trying (not hard enough, probably) to save it. Not just because hey, what would we call our city without it, but also because the lakebed is full of chemicals we'd rather not be breathing in, thanks.

      Stratos would not literally pull water out of the lake (which it is quite close to). But: the water rights they have obtained are in the watershed of the lake. So: if they use the water rights they have obtained, they might well contribute to the drying up of the lake.

      The point here is that: they are hoarding water rights that they claim they will not use - the more reasonable bet is to assume they will use them; we need a study by actual hydrologists to understand whether using the water would accelerate the lake's demise.

      And, you will notice that I have not even touched on a ton of *other* issues, such as:

      1) Is there actually demand for all of these computers?
      2) Would it be a good idea to fill this demand even if it does exist?
      3) Can we build enough computers to fill this thing in a reasonable time anyway?
      4) How far will this project get before the AI bubble pops, and will it leave anyone other than the investors holding the bag?
      5) If it does get fully built, what other resources (like more water rights) might they go after?
      6) Is it a wise idea to provide huge tax breaks to companies that expect to be highly profitable?
      7) This is being done though the Military Installation Development Authority - what's the actual military connection here?
      😎 Regardless of whether it's wet or dry, is dumping this much heat into one valley a good idea?
      9) There's no way that burning that much natural gas doesn't raise gas and electricity prices.
      10) Can we trust the developers' numbers for how many jobs this will create locally?

      Just to name a few.

      seismoallegra@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
      seismoallegra@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
      seismoallegra@mastodon.social
      wrote last edited by
      #58

      @ricci well all those numbers seem fucking crazy nuts.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

        The reason I went on this little tour was to put in perspective the proposed Stratos datacenter project in Box Elder County, UT.

        Stratos is supposedly designed to eventually reach a size of 9 GW. That is more than double the 4 GW that the entire state of Utah currently uses. The entire campus is supposed to be big enough that, for comparison, it would fill over 10% of the Salt Lake Valley, as shown in this image (which I didn't make).

        That last datacenter campus? At ~160 MW, those three buildings put together are designed for a load about 1/55th the size of Stratos. That 300 MW natural gas power station we saw in the background? Stratos is supposed to generate its own power on-site, so it will need 30 of those things. (Or maybe more - remember PUE?)

        In terms of carbon output, this thing is designed to be an absolute monster.

        There's not much getting around that. They have handwaved about including solar and/or wind, but without anything concrete, we should assume this is a whole lot of carbon.

        How about water?

        Well, that's harder to tell, given all the vagaries and "if"s in the public information so far.

        Remember, a datacenter has to get rid of a lot of heat. A datacenter that is generating its own energy on-site has to get rid of *far* more heat.

        In the desert West, the most *energy* efficient way of getting rid of heat in the hot summer months is evaporative cooling: you boil water. This has, historically, been a major way of cooling both natural gas plants and datacenters, as well as homes, etc.

        The same reason why this works well in the west is the same reason why it's problematic: we have very dry air, so evaporative cooling is very effective, but having dry air is connected to the fact that we don't have much water to begin with.

        There *are* ways to air-cool natural gas turbines, and there *are* ways to cool datacenters that are not evaporative cooling. They are more *water* efficient. But they are less *power* efficient, which means, in this context, burning even more natural gas.

        The backers of Stratos claim that they are trying to get some very new, high-tech gas turbines that operate without water cooling, or at least with very little. That does assuage some water concerns. But their language is very hedge-y - they're trying, they hope to jump in line for the limited supply of them, etc.

        They also claim they will use "closed loop" water systems for cooling the datacenter. There are several things this *could* mean, and we need to know more in order to actually understand it. Most cooling systems for datacenters and even large buildings have a closed loop of water (or another coolant) for moving heat around. That's because we cannot *make* cold, we can only *move* heat. In some datacenters, this cold loop comes into the room, where it's used to cool air, which is blown across the servers. In higher-power-density datacenters, the coolant loop comes all the way to the individual rack in order to cool the air right before it enters the servers. In the most high-tech datacenters (which Stratos would likely be), it comes all the way *inside* the server, directly exchanging heat with the hot bits like CPUs and GPUs.

        Coolant in these kinds of systems circulates, it's closed, you can generally consider the coolant loop to consume very little to no water after it's been filled.

        But: you still have to make the heat go away somehow. This is where Stratos *might* use evaporative cooling. Or they might opt for one of the more expensive, less energy efficient dry systems. Saying "we have a closed loop" only tells us *part* of the story!

        Here's what we know: the Stratos people have secured 13,000 acre-feet of water rights. In numbers that mean more to most of us, that's about 4 billion gallons per year.

        They *claim* that's far more water than they need, and they won't use most of it.

        But: if they don't manage to get their air-cooled gas turbines (which, in addition to being less efficient, also cost more), or decide to go with some evaporative cooling for the datacenter (because it's cheaper and uses less power), they could very easily use that much water. We are very much in a "trust me" situation, and it's not clear that we *should* trust what developers say when they are trying to get permits. We need to get independent studies and binding contracts.

        For those who aren't locals, you might not be aware, but: the Great Salt Lake is shrinking. People are trying (not hard enough, probably) to save it. Not just because hey, what would we call our city without it, but also because the lakebed is full of chemicals we'd rather not be breathing in, thanks.

        Stratos would not literally pull water out of the lake (which it is quite close to). But: the water rights they have obtained are in the watershed of the lake. So: if they use the water rights they have obtained, they might well contribute to the drying up of the lake.

        The point here is that: they are hoarding water rights that they claim they will not use - the more reasonable bet is to assume they will use them; we need a study by actual hydrologists to understand whether using the water would accelerate the lake's demise.

        And, you will notice that I have not even touched on a ton of *other* issues, such as:

        1) Is there actually demand for all of these computers?
        2) Would it be a good idea to fill this demand even if it does exist?
        3) Can we build enough computers to fill this thing in a reasonable time anyway?
        4) How far will this project get before the AI bubble pops, and will it leave anyone other than the investors holding the bag?
        5) If it does get fully built, what other resources (like more water rights) might they go after?
        6) Is it a wise idea to provide huge tax breaks to companies that expect to be highly profitable?
        7) This is being done though the Military Installation Development Authority - what's the actual military connection here?
        😎 Regardless of whether it's wet or dry, is dumping this much heat into one valley a good idea?
        9) There's no way that burning that much natural gas doesn't raise gas and electricity prices.
        10) Can we trust the developers' numbers for how many jobs this will create locally?

        Just to name a few.

        wiersdorf@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
        wiersdorf@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
        wiersdorf@fosstodon.org
        wrote last edited by
        #59

        @ricci Earnest question, Rob: if this were built over alfalfa fields, which would most likely use more water?

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

          The reason I went on this little tour was to put in perspective the proposed Stratos datacenter project in Box Elder County, UT.

          Stratos is supposedly designed to eventually reach a size of 9 GW. That is more than double the 4 GW that the entire state of Utah currently uses. The entire campus is supposed to be big enough that, for comparison, it would fill over 10% of the Salt Lake Valley, as shown in this image (which I didn't make).

          That last datacenter campus? At ~160 MW, those three buildings put together are designed for a load about 1/55th the size of Stratos. That 300 MW natural gas power station we saw in the background? Stratos is supposed to generate its own power on-site, so it will need 30 of those things. (Or maybe more - remember PUE?)

          In terms of carbon output, this thing is designed to be an absolute monster.

          There's not much getting around that. They have handwaved about including solar and/or wind, but without anything concrete, we should assume this is a whole lot of carbon.

          How about water?

          Well, that's harder to tell, given all the vagaries and "if"s in the public information so far.

          Remember, a datacenter has to get rid of a lot of heat. A datacenter that is generating its own energy on-site has to get rid of *far* more heat.

          In the desert West, the most *energy* efficient way of getting rid of heat in the hot summer months is evaporative cooling: you boil water. This has, historically, been a major way of cooling both natural gas plants and datacenters, as well as homes, etc.

          The same reason why this works well in the west is the same reason why it's problematic: we have very dry air, so evaporative cooling is very effective, but having dry air is connected to the fact that we don't have much water to begin with.

          There *are* ways to air-cool natural gas turbines, and there *are* ways to cool datacenters that are not evaporative cooling. They are more *water* efficient. But they are less *power* efficient, which means, in this context, burning even more natural gas.

          The backers of Stratos claim that they are trying to get some very new, high-tech gas turbines that operate without water cooling, or at least with very little. That does assuage some water concerns. But their language is very hedge-y - they're trying, they hope to jump in line for the limited supply of them, etc.

          They also claim they will use "closed loop" water systems for cooling the datacenter. There are several things this *could* mean, and we need to know more in order to actually understand it. Most cooling systems for datacenters and even large buildings have a closed loop of water (or another coolant) for moving heat around. That's because we cannot *make* cold, we can only *move* heat. In some datacenters, this cold loop comes into the room, where it's used to cool air, which is blown across the servers. In higher-power-density datacenters, the coolant loop comes all the way to the individual rack in order to cool the air right before it enters the servers. In the most high-tech datacenters (which Stratos would likely be), it comes all the way *inside* the server, directly exchanging heat with the hot bits like CPUs and GPUs.

          Coolant in these kinds of systems circulates, it's closed, you can generally consider the coolant loop to consume very little to no water after it's been filled.

          But: you still have to make the heat go away somehow. This is where Stratos *might* use evaporative cooling. Or they might opt for one of the more expensive, less energy efficient dry systems. Saying "we have a closed loop" only tells us *part* of the story!

          Here's what we know: the Stratos people have secured 13,000 acre-feet of water rights. In numbers that mean more to most of us, that's about 4 billion gallons per year.

          They *claim* that's far more water than they need, and they won't use most of it.

          But: if they don't manage to get their air-cooled gas turbines (which, in addition to being less efficient, also cost more), or decide to go with some evaporative cooling for the datacenter (because it's cheaper and uses less power), they could very easily use that much water. We are very much in a "trust me" situation, and it's not clear that we *should* trust what developers say when they are trying to get permits. We need to get independent studies and binding contracts.

          For those who aren't locals, you might not be aware, but: the Great Salt Lake is shrinking. People are trying (not hard enough, probably) to save it. Not just because hey, what would we call our city without it, but also because the lakebed is full of chemicals we'd rather not be breathing in, thanks.

          Stratos would not literally pull water out of the lake (which it is quite close to). But: the water rights they have obtained are in the watershed of the lake. So: if they use the water rights they have obtained, they might well contribute to the drying up of the lake.

          The point here is that: they are hoarding water rights that they claim they will not use - the more reasonable bet is to assume they will use them; we need a study by actual hydrologists to understand whether using the water would accelerate the lake's demise.

          And, you will notice that I have not even touched on a ton of *other* issues, such as:

          1) Is there actually demand for all of these computers?
          2) Would it be a good idea to fill this demand even if it does exist?
          3) Can we build enough computers to fill this thing in a reasonable time anyway?
          4) How far will this project get before the AI bubble pops, and will it leave anyone other than the investors holding the bag?
          5) If it does get fully built, what other resources (like more water rights) might they go after?
          6) Is it a wise idea to provide huge tax breaks to companies that expect to be highly profitable?
          7) This is being done though the Military Installation Development Authority - what's the actual military connection here?
          😎 Regardless of whether it's wet or dry, is dumping this much heat into one valley a good idea?
          9) There's no way that burning that much natural gas doesn't raise gas and electricity prices.
          10) Can we trust the developers' numbers for how many jobs this will create locally?

          Just to name a few.

          encthenet@flyovercountry.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
          encthenet@flyovercountry.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
          encthenet@flyovercountry.social
          wrote last edited by
          #60

          @ricci
          Considering that gas turbines are around 40% efficient, that means actually 22.5GW of heat will be dumped into the environment.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

            The reason I went on this little tour was to put in perspective the proposed Stratos datacenter project in Box Elder County, UT.

            Stratos is supposedly designed to eventually reach a size of 9 GW. That is more than double the 4 GW that the entire state of Utah currently uses. The entire campus is supposed to be big enough that, for comparison, it would fill over 10% of the Salt Lake Valley, as shown in this image (which I didn't make).

            That last datacenter campus? At ~160 MW, those three buildings put together are designed for a load about 1/55th the size of Stratos. That 300 MW natural gas power station we saw in the background? Stratos is supposed to generate its own power on-site, so it will need 30 of those things. (Or maybe more - remember PUE?)

            In terms of carbon output, this thing is designed to be an absolute monster.

            There's not much getting around that. They have handwaved about including solar and/or wind, but without anything concrete, we should assume this is a whole lot of carbon.

            How about water?

            Well, that's harder to tell, given all the vagaries and "if"s in the public information so far.

            Remember, a datacenter has to get rid of a lot of heat. A datacenter that is generating its own energy on-site has to get rid of *far* more heat.

            In the desert West, the most *energy* efficient way of getting rid of heat in the hot summer months is evaporative cooling: you boil water. This has, historically, been a major way of cooling both natural gas plants and datacenters, as well as homes, etc.

            The same reason why this works well in the west is the same reason why it's problematic: we have very dry air, so evaporative cooling is very effective, but having dry air is connected to the fact that we don't have much water to begin with.

            There *are* ways to air-cool natural gas turbines, and there *are* ways to cool datacenters that are not evaporative cooling. They are more *water* efficient. But they are less *power* efficient, which means, in this context, burning even more natural gas.

            The backers of Stratos claim that they are trying to get some very new, high-tech gas turbines that operate without water cooling, or at least with very little. That does assuage some water concerns. But their language is very hedge-y - they're trying, they hope to jump in line for the limited supply of them, etc.

            They also claim they will use "closed loop" water systems for cooling the datacenter. There are several things this *could* mean, and we need to know more in order to actually understand it. Most cooling systems for datacenters and even large buildings have a closed loop of water (or another coolant) for moving heat around. That's because we cannot *make* cold, we can only *move* heat. In some datacenters, this cold loop comes into the room, where it's used to cool air, which is blown across the servers. In higher-power-density datacenters, the coolant loop comes all the way to the individual rack in order to cool the air right before it enters the servers. In the most high-tech datacenters (which Stratos would likely be), it comes all the way *inside* the server, directly exchanging heat with the hot bits like CPUs and GPUs.

            Coolant in these kinds of systems circulates, it's closed, you can generally consider the coolant loop to consume very little to no water after it's been filled.

            But: you still have to make the heat go away somehow. This is where Stratos *might* use evaporative cooling. Or they might opt for one of the more expensive, less energy efficient dry systems. Saying "we have a closed loop" only tells us *part* of the story!

            Here's what we know: the Stratos people have secured 13,000 acre-feet of water rights. In numbers that mean more to most of us, that's about 4 billion gallons per year.

            They *claim* that's far more water than they need, and they won't use most of it.

            But: if they don't manage to get their air-cooled gas turbines (which, in addition to being less efficient, also cost more), or decide to go with some evaporative cooling for the datacenter (because it's cheaper and uses less power), they could very easily use that much water. We are very much in a "trust me" situation, and it's not clear that we *should* trust what developers say when they are trying to get permits. We need to get independent studies and binding contracts.

            For those who aren't locals, you might not be aware, but: the Great Salt Lake is shrinking. People are trying (not hard enough, probably) to save it. Not just because hey, what would we call our city without it, but also because the lakebed is full of chemicals we'd rather not be breathing in, thanks.

            Stratos would not literally pull water out of the lake (which it is quite close to). But: the water rights they have obtained are in the watershed of the lake. So: if they use the water rights they have obtained, they might well contribute to the drying up of the lake.

            The point here is that: they are hoarding water rights that they claim they will not use - the more reasonable bet is to assume they will use them; we need a study by actual hydrologists to understand whether using the water would accelerate the lake's demise.

            And, you will notice that I have not even touched on a ton of *other* issues, such as:

            1) Is there actually demand for all of these computers?
            2) Would it be a good idea to fill this demand even if it does exist?
            3) Can we build enough computers to fill this thing in a reasonable time anyway?
            4) How far will this project get before the AI bubble pops, and will it leave anyone other than the investors holding the bag?
            5) If it does get fully built, what other resources (like more water rights) might they go after?
            6) Is it a wise idea to provide huge tax breaks to companies that expect to be highly profitable?
            7) This is being done though the Military Installation Development Authority - what's the actual military connection here?
            😎 Regardless of whether it's wet or dry, is dumping this much heat into one valley a good idea?
            9) There's no way that burning that much natural gas doesn't raise gas and electricity prices.
            10) Can we trust the developers' numbers for how many jobs this will create locally?

            Just to name a few.

            woodenmachines@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
            woodenmachines@mastodon.socialW This user is from outside of this forum
            woodenmachines@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #61

            @ricci just what they need /s

            Link Preview Image
            A drying Great Salt Lake is spewing toxic dust. It could cost Utah billions.

            A new report from two environmental groups says elected officials and scientists aren't taking the problem seriously enough.

            favicon

            Grist (grist.org)

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

              I was on the local news about this, lol my office is such a mess

              Link Preview Image
              Closed-loop cooling systems save water, but can be a drain on electricity - KSLTV.com

              While closed-loop cooling systems, like the one being touted for a large data center in Box Elder County can save lots of water, they often use more electricity in return, which can impact the environment in other ways, according to Dr. Ricci, a professor in the University of Utah's school of computing.

              favicon

              KSLTV.com (ksltv.com)

              wiersdorf@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
              wiersdorf@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
              wiersdorf@fosstodon.org
              wrote last edited by
              #62

              @ricci …something about a clean desk being the sign of an empty mind…

              ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • darwinwoodka@mastodon.socialD darwinwoodka@mastodon.social

                @ricci

                Why are we building housing for computers and not for people?

                jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                jonhendry@iosdev.space
                wrote last edited by
                #63

                @darwinwoodka @ricci

                Venture capitalists and pension funds think it’s more profitable to do the former than the latter.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • dougfir@m.ai6yr.orgD dougfir@m.ai6yr.org

                  @ricci
                  Currently this area is remote ranching country, served by one two-lane road and no businesses like gas stations or stores. In addition to building the data center, they will have to build ALL the infrastructure needed to support it. Where are the workers going to live?

                  jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  jonhendry@iosdev.space
                  wrote last edited by
                  #64

                  @Dougfir @ricci

                  Once it’s built there won’t be many workers on site.

                  ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • bnewbold@social.coopB bnewbold@social.coop

                    @ricci interesting to me that the (presumably) higher-density facility is taller (multi-story). I've noticed that with other new-built high-density facilities.

                    to save ground space? maybe there is water cooling involved and it is helpful to have that equipment above/below servers? or high ceilings help with thermal engineering?

                    jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jonhendry@iosdev.space
                    wrote last edited by
                    #65

                    @bnewbold @ricci

                    I would assume it provides more room for plumbing, power runs, data cabling, and air handling. And maybe catwalks with easy access to them without needing a ladder or lift.

                    Silicon chip plants are also taller than you might expect.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ jonhendry@iosdev.space

                      @Dougfir @ricci

                      Once it’s built there won’t be many workers on site.

                      ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                      ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                      ricci@discuss.systems
                      wrote last edited by
                      #66

                      @jonhendry @Dougfir The developer claims 2,000 workers on site after construction, a number that seems overly optimistic

                      jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • wiersdorf@fosstodon.orgW wiersdorf@fosstodon.org

                        @ricci …something about a clean desk being the sign of an empty mind…

                        ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                        ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                        ricci@discuss.systems
                        wrote last edited by
                        #67

                        @wiersdorf This is a good question, so I looked up some numbers.

                        Two different sources get me something like 3 acre-feet of water per acre for alfalfa in that area: a 1994 report from Utah State: https://waterrights.utah.gov/docSys/v912/a912/a912044e.pdf (see SNWV in Figure 2), and a listing of a huge farm for sale in the Snowville area now: https://www.land.com/property/6034-acres-in-box-elder-county-utah/4545825/ - claims 3895 acres under irrigation using 11.7k acre-feet of water rights.

                        So that would mean that the Stratus project has secured enough water rights to farm about 4.3k acres of alfalfa (which is about 10% of the land they say they have access to).

                        So: this is not nearly enough water to farm all of that area with alfalfa (is all of it even suitable for this purpose? no idea), but enough for a big chunk of it.

                        Of course, Utah is already watering vastly more alfalfa than we can afford to with our limited water resources.

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                        • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                          @jonhendry @Dougfir The developer claims 2,000 workers on site after construction, a number that seems overly optimistic

                          jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          jonhendry@iosdev.spaceJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          jonhendry@iosdev.space
                          wrote last edited by
                          #68

                          @ricci @Dougfir

                          And then some.

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                          • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                            I was on the local news about this, lol my office is such a mess

                            Link Preview Image
                            Closed-loop cooling systems save water, but can be a drain on electricity - KSLTV.com

                            While closed-loop cooling systems, like the one being touted for a large data center in Box Elder County can save lots of water, they often use more electricity in return, which can impact the environment in other ways, according to Dr. Ricci, a professor in the University of Utah's school of computing.

                            favicon

                            KSLTV.com (ksltv.com)

                            mdione@en.osm.townM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mdione@en.osm.townM This user is from outside of this forum
                            mdione@en.osm.town
                            wrote last edited by
                            #69

                            @ricci wait, most if not all DCs use open loop cooling systems?

                            ricci@discuss.systemsR 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • ricci@discuss.systemsR ricci@discuss.systems

                              The reason I went on this little tour was to put in perspective the proposed Stratos datacenter project in Box Elder County, UT.

                              Stratos is supposedly designed to eventually reach a size of 9 GW. That is more than double the 4 GW that the entire state of Utah currently uses. The entire campus is supposed to be big enough that, for comparison, it would fill over 10% of the Salt Lake Valley, as shown in this image (which I didn't make).

                              That last datacenter campus? At ~160 MW, those three buildings put together are designed for a load about 1/55th the size of Stratos. That 300 MW natural gas power station we saw in the background? Stratos is supposed to generate its own power on-site, so it will need 30 of those things. (Or maybe more - remember PUE?)

                              In terms of carbon output, this thing is designed to be an absolute monster.

                              There's not much getting around that. They have handwaved about including solar and/or wind, but without anything concrete, we should assume this is a whole lot of carbon.

                              How about water?

                              Well, that's harder to tell, given all the vagaries and "if"s in the public information so far.

                              Remember, a datacenter has to get rid of a lot of heat. A datacenter that is generating its own energy on-site has to get rid of *far* more heat.

                              In the desert West, the most *energy* efficient way of getting rid of heat in the hot summer months is evaporative cooling: you boil water. This has, historically, been a major way of cooling both natural gas plants and datacenters, as well as homes, etc.

                              The same reason why this works well in the west is the same reason why it's problematic: we have very dry air, so evaporative cooling is very effective, but having dry air is connected to the fact that we don't have much water to begin with.

                              There *are* ways to air-cool natural gas turbines, and there *are* ways to cool datacenters that are not evaporative cooling. They are more *water* efficient. But they are less *power* efficient, which means, in this context, burning even more natural gas.

                              The backers of Stratos claim that they are trying to get some very new, high-tech gas turbines that operate without water cooling, or at least with very little. That does assuage some water concerns. But their language is very hedge-y - they're trying, they hope to jump in line for the limited supply of them, etc.

                              They also claim they will use "closed loop" water systems for cooling the datacenter. There are several things this *could* mean, and we need to know more in order to actually understand it. Most cooling systems for datacenters and even large buildings have a closed loop of water (or another coolant) for moving heat around. That's because we cannot *make* cold, we can only *move* heat. In some datacenters, this cold loop comes into the room, where it's used to cool air, which is blown across the servers. In higher-power-density datacenters, the coolant loop comes all the way to the individual rack in order to cool the air right before it enters the servers. In the most high-tech datacenters (which Stratos would likely be), it comes all the way *inside* the server, directly exchanging heat with the hot bits like CPUs and GPUs.

                              Coolant in these kinds of systems circulates, it's closed, you can generally consider the coolant loop to consume very little to no water after it's been filled.

                              But: you still have to make the heat go away somehow. This is where Stratos *might* use evaporative cooling. Or they might opt for one of the more expensive, less energy efficient dry systems. Saying "we have a closed loop" only tells us *part* of the story!

                              Here's what we know: the Stratos people have secured 13,000 acre-feet of water rights. In numbers that mean more to most of us, that's about 4 billion gallons per year.

                              They *claim* that's far more water than they need, and they won't use most of it.

                              But: if they don't manage to get their air-cooled gas turbines (which, in addition to being less efficient, also cost more), or decide to go with some evaporative cooling for the datacenter (because it's cheaper and uses less power), they could very easily use that much water. We are very much in a "trust me" situation, and it's not clear that we *should* trust what developers say when they are trying to get permits. We need to get independent studies and binding contracts.

                              For those who aren't locals, you might not be aware, but: the Great Salt Lake is shrinking. People are trying (not hard enough, probably) to save it. Not just because hey, what would we call our city without it, but also because the lakebed is full of chemicals we'd rather not be breathing in, thanks.

                              Stratos would not literally pull water out of the lake (which it is quite close to). But: the water rights they have obtained are in the watershed of the lake. So: if they use the water rights they have obtained, they might well contribute to the drying up of the lake.

                              The point here is that: they are hoarding water rights that they claim they will not use - the more reasonable bet is to assume they will use them; we need a study by actual hydrologists to understand whether using the water would accelerate the lake's demise.

                              And, you will notice that I have not even touched on a ton of *other* issues, such as:

                              1) Is there actually demand for all of these computers?
                              2) Would it be a good idea to fill this demand even if it does exist?
                              3) Can we build enough computers to fill this thing in a reasonable time anyway?
                              4) How far will this project get before the AI bubble pops, and will it leave anyone other than the investors holding the bag?
                              5) If it does get fully built, what other resources (like more water rights) might they go after?
                              6) Is it a wise idea to provide huge tax breaks to companies that expect to be highly profitable?
                              7) This is being done though the Military Installation Development Authority - what's the actual military connection here?
                              😎 Regardless of whether it's wet or dry, is dumping this much heat into one valley a good idea?
                              9) There's no way that burning that much natural gas doesn't raise gas and electricity prices.
                              10) Can we trust the developers' numbers for how many jobs this will create locally?

                              Just to name a few.

                              mamalake@beige.partyM This user is from outside of this forum
                              mamalake@beige.partyM This user is from outside of this forum
                              mamalake@beige.party
                              wrote last edited by
                              #70

                              @ricci Utah is already struggling for water, thanks for this info!!

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                              • mdione@en.osm.townM mdione@en.osm.town

                                @ricci wait, most if not all DCs use open loop cooling systems?

                                ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                ricci@discuss.systemsR This user is from outside of this forum
                                ricci@discuss.systems
                                wrote last edited by
                                #71

                                @mdione Most (probably all) DCs will use *a* closed loop where they circulate coolant (probably water, maybe mixed with glycol) to get heat out of the room (or directly off the chips). From there, many use systems that consume water to get that heat out into the environment. It's relatively new that large datacenters are trying to use entirely waterless systems on that side

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