Apple gets go-ahead to build North Carolina fuel cell installation

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
Following a relatively short approval period, the North Carolina Utilities Commision in Raleigh on Wednesday gave Apple the green light to move ahead with plans to build a 4.8-megawatt fuel cell installation at the company's Maiden data facility.

First filed for in late March, Apple's clean energy solution calls for 24 hydrogen-based "Energy Servers" from California company Bloom Energy in what will be the largest privately-owned fuel cell arrangement in the country.

The installation will join a 20-megawatt solar farm, also the largest of its kind in the nation, at Apple's Maiden, North Carolina data center which is home to iCloud and houses the brains of the iPhone 4S's Siri virtual assistant. In order to be considered a renewable energy source, Apple must offset the natural gas it plans to source from Piedmont Natural Gas by purchasing or producing the same amount of biogas from a local provider. The details of this arrangement have yet to be hammered out, though Wednesday's filing revealed that the company will be selling excess energy from the plant to Duke Energy Carolinas, LLC.



It was recently reported that Apple is working with a non-profit renewable energy organization created by the North Carolina Utilities Commission to augment the state's green energy supply. Although the huge $1 billion data center will boast massive solar and fuel cell farms, some 40 percent of the energy used will be procured from local renewable energy providers.

Apple's Maiden plant looks to be the first step in an overall rethinking of power usage as the company's Renewable Energy webpage notes a number of ongoing and future projects aimed at reducing the environmental impact of energy-hungry data centers. The iPad maker's Austin, Texas operations center, for example, has used green energy for nearly ten years while other facilities around the world are now powered by 100 percent renewable sources. Future projects include a data center in Prineville, Oregon that will rely on local wind, hydro and geothermal power sources.

Despite its efforts to go green, Apple has been singled out by activists from Greenpeace who claim the company's efforts are in need of reform.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    Ok Green Peace now show us your green energy plant!
  • Reply 2 of 5

    Quote:

     In order to be considered a renewable energy source, Apple must offset the natural gas it plans to source from Piedmont Natural Gas with a one-to-one purchase of biogas from a local provider. 


     


     


     


    What does this mean?  Why are they buying natural gas from Piedmont?  What is a "one-to-one purchase"?

  • Reply 3 of 5
    mstonemstone Posts: 11,510member


    The best way to use renewable resources is to buy it, or generate it or pay someone else to generate it wherever it is most convenient and sell it to the utility companies. Then you pick it up where ever you need it by buying it back from a utility company. It is all about the sum total input output. You don't really have to generate all the power yourself at your own facility to be considered running your plant on renewable energy.

  • Reply 4 of 5
    sierrajeffsierrajeff Posts: 366member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Hyram Gestan View Post




    Quote:

     In order to be considered a renewable energy source, Apple must offset the natural gas it plans to source from Piedmont Natural Gas with a one-to-one purchase of biogas from a local provider. 


     


     


     


    What does this mean?  Why are they buying natural gas from Piedmont?  What is a "one-to-one purchase"?



     


    It probably means that the only natural gas connection available to Apple for its NC facility is Piedmont.  But Piedmont's gas isn't from a renewable source.  So to offset this use of non-renewable gas - to make their fuel cell use deemed "renewable" - Apple will also buy an equal amount of biogas from another supplier and, unstated in the article, will sell (or "wheel", in energy parlance) this biogas into the system for use by others.


     


    It's sort of a net/net analysis:  Apple needs to use X mcf of gas; ideally it would use biogas directly, but it can't.  So it will use natural gas, and then buy and wheel the biogas:  X + X - X = X usage.

  • Reply 5 of 5
    lilgto64lilgto64 Posts: 1,147member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by digitalclips View Post



    Ok Green Peace now show us your green energy plant!


    They generate a lot of hot gas - isn't that a renewable resource?


     
Sign In or Register to comment.