-To lead a consortium to carry out pilot
implementation in Singapore-
26 Apr, 2012
TOKYO-Toshiba Corporation (TOKYO: 6502) today announced
that the company has been selected as one of four winners
in the Singapore government's Green Data Centre
Innovation Challenge, a competition to promote innovations
in energy efficiency that cut the high costs of cooling
data centres in tropical climates. Toshiba and its
partners, Nanyang Technological University (NTU) will now
carry out a pilot project to demonstrate the practicality
and cost-effectiveness of this solution.
As a major ICT hub, Singapore is host to a major data
centre cluster that the BroadGroup has predicted to grow by
50% in scale over the period 2010 to 2015. In Singapore,
the 10 largest data centres is known to consume as much
energy as 130,000 typical households. Such an expansion
will trigger a major surge in electricity demand. With the
objective to raise overall data centre energy efficiency
and boost competitiveness of the Data Centre industry, the
Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA),
initiated the Green Data Centre Innovation Challenge. This
challenge encourages companies to innovate solutions that
will significantly improve energy efficiency in the data
centre sector.
Toshiba has developed and demonstrated a space- and
energy-efficient data centre that is cooled by air drawn
from outside the data centre whenever possible-the outside
air cooling method-and has reworked this design to deal
with the cooling demands imposed by the heat and humidity
of the tropics. In a consortium with Singapore-based
subsidiary, Toshiba Asia Pacific Pte., Ltd., NTU, Toshiba
will provide the module and evaluate operation, NTU, a
leader in energy-related research, will provide the site
and also undertake evaluation.
Toshiba's original outside air data centre cooling
system was developed in Japan for more temperate climates
based on operating temperature and humidity range
recommended by American Society of Heating, Refrigerating
and Air-Conditioning Engineers, Inc.(ASHRAE) and has three
modes: outer air cooling mode for spring and autumn; mixed
air cooling mode for winter, which adds heat from the hot
area of the data centre to outer air; and circulating
cooling mode for summer, which uses a refrigeration unit to
cool the air in the data centre. Last year, operating
temperature and humidity range were eased by ASHRAE
considering recent improvement in durability performance of
server and additional new mode has been developed along
with this change: circulate mixed air cooling mode for
tropical area, which uses a refrigeration unit to cool
mixed air, which adds heat from the hot area of the data
centre to outer high and humidity air.
The modified system is designed to meet the demanding
operating requirements in the tropics. By developing new
mode, the company aims at more efficient air-conditioning
system in tropical regions.
Simulations indicate that the new system has the potential
to cut the annual power consumption of a data centre by
33%[1] and decrease approximately 2,800 tons of CO2
emissions.
Governments of Southeast Asia, including Singapore, promote
favorable tax rates to attract inward direct investment,
including data centres. The regional market in data centres
is expected to expand from 80 billion yen in 2011 to 100
billion yen in 2015[2] . Building on the momentum from the
Singapore project, Toshiba will promote sales of its
modular data centres in Southeast Asia, aiming for sales of
approximately 20 billion yen sales in 2015.
[1]When it decreases from PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness) 2.0
to 1.35 in the data
centre of 1,000 kW ICT apparatus[2] Source=Toshiba
Outline of module type data centre and facilities
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Place:
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in the premises of Nanyang Technological University
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Completion of Construction:
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July, 2012
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Size of module:
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(W)9.0 x (D) 3.0 x (H) 6.0 (m)
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Artist's impression of module type data centre and
facilities
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