Part of the LiveOAK Network

About Us:

We are a new media company publishing websites that focus on energy, the environment and sustainable living. By leading the conversation about green issues, LiveOAK aims to advance the principals of sustainability by making them meaningful and accessible to a mainstream audience.

Illinois Tech Firm and Datacenter Now 100% Powered by On-Site Wind Energy

New 500 kW wind turbine at OWC's LEED platinum headquarters in Illinois (Photo: OWC)

500 kW Vestas wind turbine at OWC's LEED platinum headquarters in Illinois (Photo: OWC)

Turbine to provide twice OWC’s electricity needs, making them the first 100% on-site wind-powered tech manufacturer in the U.S.

One of the biggest problems with any type of electricity transmission is “line loss”, or dissipated heat energy. But an even bigger problem for some electricity users, particularly those that rely on an uninterrupted power supply, is an outage on the local grid.

Illinois-based Other World Computing (OWC), a leading supplier and manufacturer of computer components and system upgrades, has found a solution to this problem with the installation of its new new 500 kW wind turbine at the company’s LEED Platinum designed facility and internet operations datacenter in Woodstock, Illinois. The Vestas V-93 turbine will allow the company to power 100% of its manufacturing, distribution and hosting operations, and still have enough leftover to sell the surplus energy back to the local utility.

Named one of Computerworld’s top 12 green-IT vendors in 2008, Other World Computing not only provides sales, support and manufacturing functions, they also provide web-hosting via their ISP division. Company officials say the wind power completely covers their datacenter energy requirements and that the added layers of redundancy will make for uninterrupted business operations and reliable web-hosting.

Facility’s electrical systems enjoy quadruple-redundancy

OWC's Vestas 500 kW V93 wind turbine.

The new OWC wind turbine is projected to generate an estimated 1,250,000 kilowatt hours per year, roughly twice the facility’s current needs. The remainder will be sold back to the local grid at a relatively low tariff, but with rising prices of electricity in the Chicago area, company officials that rate to increase.

“With the kilowatt hour rate in the Chicago market up 24.3% since 1999, it only makes sense to use technology to lower our usage and costs related to traditional power sources,” said Larry O’Connor, CEO, Other World Computing.

I followed up with OWC to see how much they were earning for the electricity they put on the grid. As it turns out, they will be selling their electricity for considerably less than local retail rates, making it a good value proposition for both the local power utility and the community alike. “The buy-back is currently a very low average of less than $.04 kWh,” OWC officials wrote in an email to Earth & Industry.

When wind speeds dwindle and there isn’t an adequate amount of power being generated, power flows back from the grid to the facility. But if there is no wind and also a power outage, OWC also has natural gas generation and an extensive battery backup system providing 4-way power redundancy for the company’s computer support service.

“So bottom line,” company officials said via email, “all our operations are designed to run without interruption…so we can deliver on our mission to serve the customer.”

Certainly not every company has the resources (financial or climatic) to install on-site wind energy generators. But with unpredictability built-in to the electric grid, more and more datacenters will be looking at generating on-site energy via wind, solar and even tidal power to provide a reliable and consistent power supply to keep their servers up and running — and their customers happy.

Follow Tim Hurst on twitter

    • Share:
    •  
    • More:

This post was written by: Timothy B. Hurst

Timothy Hurst is the founder of ecopolitology and executive editor of LiveOAK Media. He mostly covers energy and environmental politics, clean tech and green business; but has a tendency to cover music festivals in the summer. When not reading, writing, or talking about environmental politics to anyone who will listen, Tim will ski, hike with his aging lab and get dirty in his Colorado veggie garden. Follow Tim on twitter at @ecopolitologist.

7 Responses to “Illinois Tech Firm and Datacenter Now 100% Powered by On-Site Wind Energy”

  1. Denmark?

    shit, I’ve seen supermarkets and LOTS of companies here in the UK been working entirely on wind power for 5-10 years now.

    A 2m drive into the city centre has 15-20 medium sized wind tubines powering assorted tech and service companies.

  2. SBolivar says:

    It’s pretty unbelievable that there are the first company to do this. I hope the idea spreads and in a couple years this is no longer news– I mean this in the best possible way.

    This comment was originally posted on Digg

  3. jboitnott says:

    I’m just hoping that this becomes more and more common and eventually makes a difference.

    This comment was originally posted on Digg

  4. tiresias2 says:

    Why aren’t more companies doing this? Seems like the smartest thing from a business perspective…

    This comment was originally posted on Digg

  5. shridhan says:

    Shridhan Automation is a Manufactures, Exporters & Suppliers a wide variety of Level switches, Level switches for liquids and Level Transmitters for liquids in India.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. [...] tech company 100% wind-powered: Between a 50kW wind turbine and a LEED-certified building, Other World Computing is powering itself… and selling energy back to the grid. (also covered at Green Living [...]


Leave a Reply

Additional comments powered by BackType


Newsletter:

Further Reading...
Greening Brownfields: Remediation Through Sustainable Development

Strategy for Sustainability: A Business Manifesto







Climate Change: What's Your Business Strategy?

The Green Collar Economy