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        Microsoft Catches Flak over Pollution Charges at Wash. Datacenter
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - September 26, 2012
 
		
        
		Microsoft's Quincy, Wash. datacenter is in the spotlight this week after The New York Times published a story on Monday depicting the pollution, power-wasting and political  arm-twisting associated with the facility.
The datacenter  building boom has taken off in Quincy, a small rural town in central Washington with a population of roughly 6,220. Besides Microsoft's facility,  which occupies the space of 10 football fields, Quincy is home to datacenters  built for Dell, Intuit, Sabey and Yahoo. According to The Times, Quincy has embraced a new kind of farming by supporting power-hungry datacenters or  "server farms," which can tap local hydropower from the Columbia  River. The datacenters support various online services. 
However, while such activity may seem  good for the city's finances, the Times' story depicts a cautionary tale.
 
While Microsoft contributed a lot of tax dollars to  Quincy in  building its datacenter there,  it also pushed city officials around,  according to The Times' account. The  story also focuses on Microsoft's reliance on the use of dirty diesel  generators to power its Quincy facility, as well as an incident in which  Microsoft threatened to waste power in order to not pay a fine for  overestimating electrical power use.
 
The Times' story  cites a local resident talking about the cloud of black smoke that arises when  Microsoft starts its diesel generators in the morning, but a  blog post by Brian Janous, utility architect for datacenter advanced  development at Microsoft, sidesteps the question about the diesel pollution.
 
"One section of the article implies that Microsoft has  run its diesel backup generators in excess of what is required to provide safe,  reliable power to our data centers. We would respectfully disagree,"  Janous wrote.
 Even though the Microsoft claims that its Quincy facility is  "powered 100 percent by renewable hydropower," diesel generators are  still used, presumably as a fail-safe measure. A Microsoft-produced  video that describes the Quincy facility states that Microsoft keeps onsite  fuel supplies on the grounds for "natural disasters." However, The Times' account indicates that the diesel  generators are used for backup power. Quincy is a "generation-2"  Microsoft facility. Microsoft claims up to 50 percent greater energy efficiency  with its current "generation-4" datacenters. Diesel use has been  cited a pollution problem before with Microsoft's facilities. The Times' story cites Microsoft's Santa  Clara datacenter as being one of the biggest diesel polluters in 2008 and 2009,  according to the Bay Area Air Quality Management District.
 
Environmental activist group Greenpeace, which has an  ongoing campaign to get companies running datacenters to use renewable and  clean power sources, published a report in April (PDF)  listing the various service providers that are using dirty energy. The Quincy facility  is listed in the report as using 74.24 percent renewable energy (rather than  100 percent as claimed by Microsoft), which is better than many datacenters. However,  Microsoft is also listed as a heavy user of coal and nuclear energies in its  facilities, according to the report. A GreenPeace  editorial running on the same day as the Times piece noted that the  campaign has been somewhat successful in getting Facebook and Google to change  course, but many datacenters rely on energy producers that continue to use  nonrenewable and dirty fuels.
 The Times' story  depicts Microsoft as treating local officials as if Quincy were bought and paid  for by the company. For instance, Microsoft challenged a $210,000 penalty  assessed by the Grant County Public Utility District. The public utility fines  companies when they overestimate or underestimate their power use because the  utility has to try to sell the excess power that's available to meet its  budgets. Microsoft used less power than it estimated, but instead of paying the  penalty like Yahoo did, Microsoft threatened to waste power instead.
 
The threat came in the form of a letter from letter from Darrell Amundson, the manager of Microsoft Quincy  facility, according to The Times' account. And the threat was apparently carried out. City officials said  Microsoft began burning an additional "five million to seven million watts"  of power in mid-December. In response, the utility's board met and decided to reduce  Microsoft's penalty to $60,000.
 
Janous' blog post doesn't mention Microsoft's  pushback on the Quincy utility's penalty. He just concluded his blog post by  claiming that Microsoft "will continue to work with industry, governments,  customers, local communities, and other stakeholders to improve the efficiency,  sustainability, reliability, and safety of our data centers, and to share our  best practices with others."
 Microsoft claims to be engaged in power  efficiency efforts in its datacenters, as outlined in its "Top 10 Business  Practices for Environmentally Sustainable Data Centers" document (PDF). One of those practices is the creation of a "carbon  fee" within Microsoft, a procedure of using an internal cost model to help  reduce the company's carbon output. Microsoft  claims to be making progress on that front, based on  its participation in the Carbon  Disclosure Project, a nonprofit organization that  counts Microsoft and SAP as partners.
 In any case, the unrefuted picture in The Times' story is that the ostensible  greenness of datacenters isn't a reality in some locations, and that the large  companies building them can have overweening power over local city officials  due to economic clout. Along with the pollution that datacenters bring, few  jobs result. Janous estimated that Microsoft's Quincy facility only created 50  jobs.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.