Going Beyond Compliance: When Compliance Alone is Not Enough

June 6, 2022
While exceeding compliance may be possible, it can cost more to do so. Allan Schurr of Enchanted Rock explains how clean microgrids can help data centers exceed minimum compliance and save money. 
We all face regulations in our personal and professional lives.
As a result, we can grow numb to the countless ways that these regulations dictate the decisions we make. In business, most regulations are well-intended and meeting them is not open for debate. Equal employment, job site safety, and accurate accounting practices are just a handful of obvious examples.

In other examples, the minimum regulation represents minimum compliance. While exceeding compliance may be possible, it can cost more to do so. Sometimes, however, going beyond compliance is both the responsible thing to do and can save money. For data center operators that have made commitments to social responsibility or sustainability and carbon reductions, such an option exists right now.

Almost all data centers rely on backup diesel generators to provide electricity when utility power is not available. This equipment has not changed much in the last 20 years. Large diesel reciprocating engine gensets start quickly and handle the rigorous technical needs of a data center. But the local pollution levels allowed by the most common Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Tier2 and more stringent Tier4 generator regulations are so high that the generator is only allowed to run during emergencies and for very limited testing and non-emergency hours. EPA studies have shown that these local emissions are the cause of higher rates of asthma and other lung ailments.

Why do data centers settle for compliance when a much cleaner option is now available that can save them money too? Clean microgrids, like those provided by Enchanted Rock, are an alternative to diesel backup generators, and can materially reduce local emissions by between 20 and 1,000 times, reducing or even eliminating the carbon footprint of backup power with the use of renewable fuels.

Because they are so clean, they can also be used to support the broader power grid, which has become challenged by the growing share of renewable energy, like wind and solar power. These grid support services can also, therefore, generate significant revenues from what is normally an idle asset class, reducing the net cost of the backup generating plant to below the cost of diesel options.

Need more reasons? Microgrids can reduce regulatory permitting obstacles and generate net revenue streams ranging from $50,000 to $150,000 per MW-year, or add up to $10 million per year of increased margin for a large data center.

Sometimes going beyond compliance can yield surprising benefits for society and the company itself. The air quality benefits to local communities are reason alone, but data center operators can also support the community, meet climate goals, and save money.

I love it when a plan comes together!

Allan Schurr is CCO of Enchanted Rock. Contact them to learn more about their clean microgrid solutions for data centers.

About the Author

Voices of the Industry

Our Voice of the Industry feature showcases guest articles on thought leadership from sponsors of Data Center Frontier. For more information, see our Voices of the Industry description and guidelines.

Sponsored Recommendations

The AI Disruption: Challenges and Guidance for Data Center Design

From large training clusters to small edge inference servers, AI is becoming a larger percentage of data center workloads. Learn more.

A better approach to boost data center capacity – Supply capacity agreements

Explore a transformative approach to data center capacity planning with insights on supply capacity agreements, addressing the impact of COVID-19, the AI race, and the evolving...

How Modernizing Aging Data Center Infrastructure Improves Sustainability

Explore the path to improved sustainability in data centers by modernizing aging infrastructure, uncovering challenges, three effective approaches, and specific examples outlined...

How Modern DCIM Helps Multi-Tenant Colocation Data Centers Be More Competitive

Discover the transformative impact of modern DCIM software on multi-tenant colocation data centers, enhancing competitiveness through improved resiliency, security, environmental...

Sashkin/Shutterstock.com

Unpacking CDU Motors: It’s Not Just About Redundancy

Matt Archibald, Director of Technical Architecture at nVent, explores methods for controlling coolant distribution units (CDU), the "heart" of the liquid cooling system.

White Papers

Dcf Schneider64 Wp Cover 2022 02 10 9 39 54 230x300

Why Data Centers Must Prioritize Environmental Sustainability: Four Key Drivers

Feb. 11, 2022
Energy efficiency has been a top priority for data center colocation providers over the past twenty years. Now, sustainability is a priority. In this white paper, Schneider Electric...