Technology Quarterly | The internet and climate change
Data centres improved greatly in energy efficiency as they grew massively larger
But can this continue into the age of AI?
As you step into one of 42 data halls on a plot of 74,000 square metres near Sydney, Australia, you become immersed in a sterile science-fiction world. Towering rows of black server cabinets stand in meticulous order, containing thousands of whirring hard drives, the beating metal hearts of a massive “hyperscale” data centre. Overhead, fibre-optic cables carry data down into each cabinet; metal wires, electricity. Outside a substation delivers power; batteries and generators provide backup. The digital world pulses unceasingly on an uninterrupted flow of electricity.
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This article appeared in the Technology Quarterly section of the print edition under the headline “Economies of hyperscale”