“Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world\'s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” -  Susan B. Anthony

Powering a Paperless World

This article on STLtoday.com details a few real estate acquisitions that just closed in the St. Louis market but doesn’t speak to the unique nature of the acquirer. The company who bought the three buildings, Digital Realty Trust, specializes in technology and datacenter-related real estate. Nothing special on the sustainability front here, except that this investment signals that St. Louis is doing well in grabbing the attention of West Coast companies (my previous post, Pure Power, highlighted the same). Finding the company’s specialty interesting, I did some digging on their website and found a heartening paragraph:

Our Green Datacenter Vision
Digital Realty Trust is committed to developing practical standards that reduce datacenter power requirements and negative by-products while increasing their operational effectiveness. Our datacenter facilities are designed to LEEDs (U.S.A.) and BREEAM (Europe) certification standards. Digital Realty Trust is a voting member of the Green Grid consortium.

Turn-KeyWhat people often forget is that when they go digital, consumption of paper is replaced by the consumption of electricity. The Internet only works because gazillions of megawatts of power keep server farms from going dark and shutting down your access to videos of kittens playing with yarn (I know, so cute!). And those suckers run twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, three hundred and sixty five days a year. I’m not sure what level of energy use essentially negates the elimination of a ream of paper, but you can see where I’m going with this. In the digital age, waste isn’t localized in your recycling bin (or trash can if you suck), but focused where power – dirty power at that – produced. This makes ignoring the environmental effects of reading something on the Internet easier to ignore than reading something on paper. I’m encouraged that companies like Digital Realty Trust are making an effort to green their business, especially when there’s no ostensible negative effect on the environment from their operations. One’s motivation is completely different when his coal plant is being picketed. The company’s decision signals heightened social conscience and corporate responsibility. I’d love to get my hands on some data that shows how their greening efforts have reduced power consumption, but either way, kudos.

3 responses to “Powering a Paperless World”

  1. camphor

    Are you of the opinion that _all_ power is ‘dirty’?

  2. Carnival of the Green # 94. « Camphor’s

    [...] for the cost of the alternative to the environment as Vihar Seth point out the downside of Powering a Paperless World, and applaud a green digital [...]

Leave a Reply

Switch to our mobile site