Endless emails,Taste of Future Sister-in-law map requests, web searches, and everything else we do online requires the use of energy-hungry, water-guzzling data centers.
For Google, that enormous thirst for water is causing controversy near Charleston, South Carolina, where the tech giant hosts a sprawling data center complex.
Google wants to draw 1.5 million gallons per day from an aquifer to help cool the servers at its facility in Berkeley County. The data center already uses about 4 million gallons of surface water per day, the Post and Courier newspaper reported.
SEE ALSO: This tech giant just hit two impressive clean energy milestonesSome residents, conservationists, and local water utility leaders say South Carolina officials should hold off on granting Google's groundwater request.
The region's aquifers -- which contain water that seeps from the surface over decades and centuries -- are already strained due to the recent residential and commercial boom.
New industries, corporate farms, and an influx of residents are apparently pumping out water faster than the aquifers can replenish, spurring "water wars" in South Carolina, the newspaper reported.
Via GiphyState and federal scientists are still trying to figure out how much water can be drawn without exhausting the region's groundwater supplies. If that happens, large swaths of the Southeast United States could lose reserve tanks of freshwater, making it harder to endure the region's on-again, off-again droughts.
Google isn't the only tech company to grapple with water issues.
Facebook's data center in Prineville, Oregon competes for freshwater with farmers and a growing local population. In Utah, which just kicked a six-year-long drought, eBay's facility in Salt Lake City uses increasing amounts of water.
The industry's high demand for water has worried some tech investors, particularly in states like California where natural water resources are becoming ever more scarce, Bloomberg previously reported.
Across the country, data centers consumed roughly 626 billion liters of water, or 165 billion gallons, to cool their whirring servers and power their facilities in 2014, according to the Energy Department's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. By 2020, annual water use could rise to about 660 billion liters, or 174 billion gallons.
Still, companies have made significant strides in recent years to reduce the environmental impact of their ever-expanding facilities.
Google said its data centers and offices worldwide will get 100 percent of their electricity from wind and solar power plants.
The California tech giant said it also regularly updates and redesigns cooling technologies at its data centers. To cut down on freshwater, some of its facilities use seawater, industrial canal water, recycled "gray" water from sinks and showers, captured stormwater, or harvested rainwater. Other centers don't use water at all and instead rely on outside air cooling.
At its South Carolina data center, a $1.2 billion facility, Google is experimenting with a rainwater retention pond as a source of water to cool its systems.
Google said it had studied other water-cooling alternatives for the facility and decided that pumping groundwater was the most readily available solution, according to the company's permit application to the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control.
The Post and Courier said Google has been "tight-lipped" about its operations in Berkeley County, as it has at other centers. Google has a non-disclosure agreement with the county's water and sanitation department, which does not release data about how much water Google uses or how much it pays.
The health department is expected to decide on Google's groundwater permit in May.
Opponents want state officials to wait until the U.S. Geological Survey completes its study on the region's groundwater capacity. That study, due sometime in 2019, could help end what critics have called a "free-for-all" on the state's underground water resources.
Greta Thunberg arrives in Portugal on her way to climate talksWalmart and ChickDoes your kid think your smart speaker is just another family member?'Servant' review: Apple TV+ delivers a stylish and slow mysteryUnderwater speakers could help revive ailing coral reefs, study showsLooks like Hillary Clinton and the internet are on the same page about this Mike Pence email thingAmazon introduces a portable Echo speaker, but only in 1 countryI'm living for the weird Disney+ '60s and '70s gems that I'd forgottenEmma Watson defends her 2014 comments about BeyoncéChina releases surprisingly progressive sex education textbook supporting sameEveryone is making the same point about the gay character in 'Beauty and the Beast'13 mildly sassy outSomeone pretended to be a mayor and the government gave him a .gov domainLooks like Hillary Clinton and the internet are on the same page about this Mike Pence email thingClimate change models have been accurate since the 1970sJohn Boyega just really wants Oscar Isaac to love him backThe White House just plagiarized an ExxonMobil press releaseMinister slammed on Twitter for saying women need protection from 'hormonal outbursts'Google's cofounders are no longer running AlphabetPizza dipped in milk is the most disrespectful pizza crime yet Zayn accepted an award he didn't win, so iHeartRadio made up a new category for him 'Star Trek: Discovery' has found its captain The cast of 'Harry Potter' have a WhatsApp group and it sounds simply magical Scientists could end up flying blind about Arctic sea ice at the worst possible time Edward Snowden weighs in on WikiLeaks CIA dump 11 things we get to know about the Wonder Woman movie ahead of time CIA hack of Samsung TVs was named after a Doctor Who monster Ben & Jerry's will sell ice cream that tastes like your favorite cereal Is that Bulbasaur on wheels? Nope, it's Volkswagen's new concept car. What would animals say if tech let them talk? Nothing good, probably. Even Superman has terrible, horrible, no good, very bad days IMDb introduces 'F' rating to highlight female Scientists store digital files in an unlikely place: DNA Turtle living in wishing pond gets surgery after years of eating of coins left by tourists Researchers discover how normal people (like you) become internet trolls Today's NYT mini crossword answers for June 24, 2025 Instagram rips off yet another feature from Snapchat Trump still refuses to wear his tie correctly and tapes it down instead Apple patent could identify where people are in a room in real time Minister slammed on Twitter for saying women need protection from 'hormonal outbursts'
3.4984s , 10136.5703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Taste of Future Sister-in-law】,Prosperous Times Information Network