Monday, January 12, 2009

Google Polluting Environment

A Harvard University physicist has determined a way to measure the carbon footprint of performing a search on Google.

“A Google search has a definite environmental impact,” said Alex Wissner-Gross, who conducted research on how much power is demanded by a typical search.

He found that a normal search generates about 7g of CO2.

The reason, Wissner-Gross said, is that “Google operates huge data centers around the world that consume a great deal of power.”

Most people who click over to Google don’t even consider that their searches may have a measurable consequence on the environment.

Google is secretive about its energy consumption and carbon footprint. It also refuses to divulge the locations of its data centers. However, with more than 200 million Internet searches estimated globally daily, the electricity consumption and greenhouse gas emissions caused by computers and the Internet is provoking concern, according to a report on Sunday in The Times of London.

The global IT industry generates about 2 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions, or about as much greenhouse gas as the world's airlines, according to a recent Gartner study.

“Data centers are among the most energy-intensive facilities imaginable,” said Evan Mills, a scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California.

A typical phrase search on Google requires information to be sent to servers across the globe, which demands a high amount of energy and generates high levels of CO2.

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