Mention "renewable energy" to most people, and they think solar (usually photovoltaic, or PV). While most of my posts are about solar (it's in the news a lot), wind, hydro, geothermal, and biomass are all sources of renewable, or sustainable, power.
From Wired
Apple says that a biogas-powered fuel cell system that will help
power its Maiden, North Carolina, data center could be up and running as
early as June, much earlier than previously expected.
The company made the disclosure in a Wednesday regulatory filing with the North Carolina Utilities Commission.
First reported by Greensboro News & Record,
the filing offers a few more technical details on the 4.8 megawatt
facility, which will be comprised of 24-200 kilowatt fuel cell systems
that will “sit on a common concrete pad out of doors.” Each system will
have six power-generating modules, Apple says.
The fuel cells take methane — in this case, produced by animal waste —
and convert that to electricity. Apple’s installation will be built by
California’s Bloom Energy, and it will be the largest such fuel cell
installation built outside of the utility industry, the News &
Record reports.
The first of Apple’s fuel cells could be online as early as June, and
Apple expects to have the whole facility up and running by the end of
November. Apple isn’t saying publicly what it will cost — that part was
filed under seal.
Apple’s trying to turn around its reputation as a dirty energy user with the Maiden facility, which powers its iCloud. Right next to the biogas plant, Apple’s building a massive 20-megawatt solar array.
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