STACK OSL01 Ulven: DigiPlex data center will help keep Oslo warm
Aug 22, 2018 | Posted by Eric Bell
Nordic data center operator DigiPlex has announced plans to recover waste thermal energy from its campus in Ulven, Oslo, and use it to heat residential properties.
The company has agreed on a partnership with a subsidiary of utility provider Fortum, which has similar arrangements with data center owners across Scandinavia. The company will also provide DigiPlex with cold water for its cooling needs.
The facility in Oslo could heat as many as 5,000 apartments once the system is fully operational.
“Digitization must move towards a greener world, and our cooperation with Fortum Oslo Varme is an important step in that direction. From autumn 2019, when end users in Norway browse the web, they will be indirectly contributing to the heating of apartments in Oslo,” said Gisle Eckhoff, CEO of DigiPlex.
DigiPlex runs data centers powered by 100 percent renewable electricity, with sites in Sweden, Norway and Denmark.
Waste heat recapture can considerably improve data center efficiency, helping avoid venting valuable energy into the atmosphere, but it requires a district heating system, an extensive network of pipes carrying hot water to its intended destination, as opposed to heating it on the spot. Such networks are especially popular in Northern Europe – for example in Stockholm, nearly 90 percent of buildings are plugged into the district heating system.
DigiPlex is already recovering waste heat at its campus in Stockholm, in collaboration with Stockholm Exergi (previously known as Fortum Värme) - a joint venture between Fortum and the city of Stockholm.
Now, it will replicate this model in Oslo – with Fortum Oslo Varme establishing an energy production unit on campus, with all the associated heat pumps and pipelines...
Source: DatacenterDynamics