Apple said it plans to make its Maiden, N.C., data center run entirely off renewable energy by the end of the year.
The company said it's building two solar array installations in the 
area, which when combined will bring in 84 million kilowatt-hours of 
power annually. Apple is also at work on its bio-gas fuel cell 
installation, set to be completed later this year.
All told, Apple says it will produce 60 percent of the power it 
requires to run the data center on site, procuring the other 40 percent 
from "local and regional sources" that are renewable.
Facilities like the one in Maiden power Apple's growing cloud 
services effort. Last June the company introduced iCloud, its storage 
and sync service, which relies on the data centers to store user data 
and information. The data centers also play a role in powering Siri, the
 voice assistant feature for the
iPhone 4S.
Apple posted information about its plans in a new section of its environmental Web site today. In an interview with Reuters,
 Apple Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer noted that the two 
solar farms would be twice as large as the company had originally let 
on. A proposal that surfaced earlier today
 noted that the farm across the street from the data center was given 
regulatory approval by the North Carolina Utilities Commission. 
The new information comes on the heels of a demonstration against Apple
 by Greenpeace. Earlier this week, the environmental activist group set 
up a portable building at Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., as 
well as projecting messages onto the company's glass entryway. Both were
 the latest part of the group's Clean Our Cloud campaign, which 
pressures tech companies like Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon to use less 
dirty energy to power their data centers. 
The Maiden facility will be the latest used by the company to run 
entirely off renewable energy, Apple said. The company's operations 
centers in Austin, Texas; Sacramento, Calif.; and Cork, Ireland, as well
 as a facility in Munich, Germany, already meet that metric. Apple says 
its upcoming data center in Prineville, Ore., will also run entirely off
 renewable energy.
This article comes from:http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57436553-37/apples-main-data-center-to-go-fully-renewable-this-year/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=
 
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