EN
21 February 2012 - 06:04 AMT

Apple reveals details of N. Carolina data center’s solar array

While Apple's brand has taken hits on the environmental side due to criticism from Chinese activists, the company is pushing for attention on its upcoming North Carolina data center's solar array and allowing independent review of its Chinese suppliers, according to Digital Trends.

More news of Apple’s monster data center in-progress near Maiden, North Carolina has surfaced. The company’s latest 2012 facilities report details Apple’s impact on the environment, and highlights the upcoming data center’s energy-efficient design elements, as well as the center’s renewable energy approach.

According to the report, the Maiden facility–also code-named ‘Project Dolphin’ by the Cupertino company–will be fed by “the nation’s largest end user-owned, onsite solar array.” Last fall, it was reported that Apple had bought and cleared land next to the Maiden build site for this solar farm. The company projects that the 100-acre, 20-megawatt facility will be able to pump out 42 million kWh of renewable energy each year.

Along with that solar array, the company is building a fuel cell installation, which will be directly adjacent to the Maiden data center, and is expected to be online later in 2012. Apple is again making sure this isn’t just big, but the “largest non-utility fuel cell installation operating anywhere in the country.” 100 percent of the power for the 5-megawatt facility will be from biogas, and will be providing an estimated 40 million kWh of renewable energy annually. The company has already gone forward with a 500-kilowatt biogass fuel cell project for its Cupertino, California corporate facilities, and reports that the installation has helped avoid more than 1.2 million kilograms of CO2e emissions.

Apple boasts LEED Platinum certification from the U.S. Green Building Council for the data center’s plans. Complementing center’s renewable energy, the company also details a number of green building design elements, such as the white-cool roof design for solar reflectivity, the 14 percent recycled materials used for construction and the 93 percent of construction waste diverted from landfills. The company is also pushing for real-time power monitoring, a chilled water storage system, use of outside air cooling and other methods to ensure precision when managing cooling.