So people can pay for witty tweets?

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zakiyatasnim
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:56 am

So people can pay for witty tweets?

Post by zakiyatasnim »

But the low rate in this case does not encourage data centers to manage excess electricity more efficiently. On the contrary, operators are starting to worry less about electricity consumption, which, as shown above, can lead to energy shortages. A government initiative can help solve this problem.

It is already known that some Norwegian companies are involved in the process of heat recycling. For example, the country's largest data center DigiPlex in Oslo directs part of the excess heat to heat residential malta number data buildings. The company has reached an agreement with the utility provider Fortum - it works on similar terms with data centers throughout Scandinavia. It was assumed that when the DigiPlex system is fully launched, 5 thousand apartments in Oslo will be heated.

Warmed by data centers
In addition to Norway, Denmark is looking towards "green" data center initiatives. For example, Facebook is expanding its European data center in the Danish city of Odense. At the start of the project, the system's capacity was enough to heat about 6.9 thousand houses, but it is planned to increase it and bring the number of heated houses to 11 thousand.

And in the Netherlands, data center servers will heat farms. VRV system manufacturer ITRenew intends to team up with Dutch hosting provider Blockheating to provide heat from data centers to thousands of hectares of greenhouses where tomatoes are grown.
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