Arctic

Server farms: A new industry in the Arctic? Facebook thinks so.

Editor's note: Some entrepreneurs and politicians have suggested Alaska should create a server farm next to its Arctic oil and gas fields, where the servers could be kept cool and powered easily. Apparently, though, they never got around to asking Mark Zuckerberg if Facebook would be interested in Alaska.

A lot has been said about the competition for the Arctic's natural resources, like oil and gas, fisheries, and minerals. Little has been said about using the cold as a resource. Now, of all companies, Facebook is intending to capitalize on the Arctic's frigid climate by building a data center in Luleå, on the coast of Swedish Lapland.

The city, Sweden's seventh-most populated, already has a sizable IT industry and a large university, so it is not terribly surprising that after reportedly considering 40 locations in the country, Facebook chose Luleå. Another advantage is that by locating the servers in Europe, Facebook will be able to provide faster service for its members in Europe.

Most importantly for the data center, the town's sub-Arctic average temperature, which hovers in the 30s year-round, will keep Facebook from having to spend a lot of money on air conditioning, fans, and ventilation to keep the servers cool.

Of course, the data center will still need electricity to run.

With three large buildings covering the size of 11 football fields, the server farm will consume 120 megawatts of electricty. The cost for this energy consumption is estimated to be $72 million a year. The data center will be completely powered by 15 hydropower stations on the nearby Lule River, which generate 12.7 billion KWh of electricity. For comparison's sake, the Hoover Dam generates an average of 4 billion Kwh annually. In the case of an emergency, Facebook's server farms will have back-up diesel generators.

Facebook's investment will be a boon to Luleå's economy, and server farms could be a new source of economic growth throughout the rest of the circumpolar north.

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However, it can't just be cold: There has to be a major source of inexpensive energy nearby, too. Sweden's business-friendly government helps matters as well.

For other countries in the Arctic to attract technology companies looking to build server farms, they'll need to have all three of the above. It will be interesting to see if Russia, which also has low average temperatures and over fifty hydropower stations, but a notably less business-friendly environment, will be able to attract tech companies looking to keep in the cold.

Mia Bennett

Mia Bennett graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2010 with degrees in Political Science and European Studies and minors in Geospatial Information Systems & Technology, Scandinavian, and French. She focuses on the politics of Arctic resource management and Canadian infrastructure, and is interested in the application of GIS technology to Arctic dilemmas. She speaks French, Swedish, and is learning Russian. She freelances for the magazine ReNew Canada and currently lives in New York City.

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