A new study suggests that large Artificial Intelligence (AI) data centers are increasing surface temperatures by 2°C on average, thereby creating the “data heat island effect” that could affect 340 million people.
The study titled ‘Data Heat Island Effect: Quantifying the Impact of AI Data Centers in a Warming World’ has taken into account 6733 data centers around the world, all located outside highly dense urban areas.
“We estimate that the land surface temperature increases by 2°C on average after the start of operations of an AI data center, inducing local microclimate zones, which we call the data heat island effect. We assess the impact on the communities, quantifying that more than 340 million people could be affected by this temperature increase,” read an excerpt from the study.
The study was prepared by a 12-member international team of researchers led by University of Cambridge. It has not been peer reviewed yet.
The study suggests that these “data center heat islands” can spread heat up to 10 km away and may already be affecting around 340 million people worldwide as AI infrastructure rapidly grows.
The team, led by Andrea Marinoni, associate professor with the Earth Observation group at the University of Cambridge, used satellite data to track temperature records over the last 20 years and compared them to the locations of major data centers. They found that once a data center starts operating, nearby land becomes noticeably hotter. Similar patterns were seen in regions like Mexico’s Bajio and Spain’s Aragon, where temperatures rose without any other clear reason.
Data centers are large-scale centralized buildings hosting IT infrastructure- servers, storage systems and networking equipment to store, process and manage vast amounts of data. These servers require large amounts of electricity and water, and they produce a lot of extra heat, which combined with lack of green space and presence of construction material, lead to “heat island” effect.
Climate activists and local communities have been protesting against the expansion of data centers in U.K. and U.S. with a recent protest march held in London.
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