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U.S. Green Data Center Market - Industry Outlook & Forecast 2023-2028

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    Report

  • 247 Pages
  • March 2023
  • Region: United States
  • Arizton
  • ID: 5743992
UP TO OFF until Dec 31st 2024
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The U.S. green data center market is expected to reach USD 24.20 billion by 2028, growing at a CAGR of 9.82%. After the U.S. rejoined the Paris Agreement and companies and signed various agreements like the iMasons Climate Accord etc., The government and companies are all proactive in deploying technologies and taking the latest initiative in moving towards sustainability. Hyperscale operators such as AWS, Facebook (Meta), Microsoft, Apple, and Google are leading in terms of new innovations in sustainability in the data center industry. Most U.S. green data center market players, especially colocation operators like Equinix, Digital Realty, CyrusOne, Aligned, STACK Infrastructure, Iron Mountain, QTS Realty Trust, Vantage Data Centers, Switch, and more, are investing in procuring renewable power and installing energy-efficient equipment.



KEY TRENDS IMPACTING THE U.S. GREEN DATA CENTER MARKET

Increased Focus On Renewable Energy Sources and Efficient Cooling

  • Hyperscale players such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google, Facebook (Meta), Microsoft, and Apple are procuring renewable energy for their facilities.
  • AWS meets 85% of its energy requirements from renewable energy.
  • Google, Facebook (Meta), and Apple meet 100% of their energy requirements for data centers from renewable energy.
  • Microsoft aims to power all facilities with 100% renewable energy by 2025.
  • Colocation operators in the U.S. green data center market, such as Equinix, Digital Realty, CyrusOne, Vantage Data Centers, STACK Infrastructure, Iron Mountain, QTS Realty Trust, Aligned, and others, are proactively signing PPAs and procuring renewable energy to power their facilities to meet their sustainability goals.
  • Digital Realty meets 100% of its energy requirements for data centers from renewable energy.
  • QTS Realty Trust meets 35% of its energy requirements from renewable energy with a target of 100% renewable energy by 2025.
  • The use of free cooling chillers will increase to reduce power consumption and carbon emissions by facilities. Also, the shift will increase towards liquid cooling leading to more sustainable data centers and bringing down PUE to a range of 1.1 to 1.4.
  • Air cooling and liquid immersion cooling will also be used in most facilities to reduce their impact on the environment and reduce the PUE of data centers.
  • Data center firms have also started investing in renewable energy farms by acquiring or developing their own.
  • A few examples of the singing of PPAs or constructing renewable energy farms are -
  • Amazon signed a PPA with AES Corp. for 450MW solar power. Amazon will use it for California operations, including its data centers. In addition, Amazon is planning the construction of two solar farms in Louisiana in the U.S.
  • Google signed 942 MW PPA on solar power projects under development in Texas.
  • Microsoft has signed a 110 MW Power Purchase Agreement with AES to secure renewable energy for its Californian facilities.
  • CyrusOne collaborated with Gexa Energy, a NextEra Energy subsidiary, to procure solar (30 MW) and wind (10 MW) energy for its North Texas facilities.
  • STACK Infrastructure plans to build a new 216 MW data center campus in Ashburn, Virginia, powered with 100% renewable energy supplied by Dominion Energy

Increased support by local governments in the form of sustainable initiatives, incentives, and data localization laws

  • Going back to 2015, the U.S. government had mandated all federal government data centers to install DCIM software and achieve a PUE of 1.5 or lower
  • The U.S. department of energy announced a USD 42 million fund under Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) project to fund suitable companies working in “high-performance energy efficient cooling solutions for data centers.”
  • Oregon has announced its data center policy recently, citing that other states also may consider formulating such policy to reduce the environmental impact of facilities.
  • The Florida Government has announced plans to eliminate its carbon emissions by 2045.
  • The Georgia Government is setting goals for a 50 percent decrease in greenhouse gas by 2030.

SEGMENTATION INSIGHTS

Electrical Infrastructure - Efficient and Sustainable Power Infrastructure Replacing Traditional Power Systems

  • The increasing demand for efficiency in facilities has fueled the growth of efficient infrastructure such as lithium-ion UPS systems, fuel cells, HVO, Natural Gas generators, nuclear energy reactors, and more.
  • Microsoft partnered with Plug Power to test a new power generation system with 3MW capacity, based on hydrogen as a fuel source.
  • Compass Data Centers and Foster Fuels made an agreement together to produce Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil- based biodiesel for Compass Data centers’ generators.
  • EdgeCore is using Lithium-ion UPS batteries in its Ashburn Data center campus.
  • Google has partnered with Fervo Energy to develop a geothermal power project to add clean energy to the Nevada power grid.
  • Rolls Royce announced its plan to offer small nuclear reactors for U.S.-based cloud operators such as AWS, Google, and Microsoft.
  • Woodstock Power company provides nuclear gas power backup generators to the facilities.
  • Companies are using Microgrids and Smart grids to further stabilize power supply to the data center and back to the grid in the hour of need.
  • Microsoft has partnered with Eaton, which will outfit all of Microsoft’s data centers with grid-interactive UPS.
  • Microsoft has partnered with Enchanted Rock for its new Datacenter in San Jose, USA, where it will complete a Microgrid project for the facility.
  • Companies are also considering using liquid metal batteries, sodium-ion batteries, and Nickel Zinc batteries. Though in the introductory stage, it may be revolutionary in the near future for the data center industry.

Mechanical Infrastructure - U.S. To Witness an Increase in Advanced Cooling Technologies

  • Increased deployment of artificial intelligence and machine learning workloads will increase liquid immersion and direct-to-chip cooling in the U.S. It will help companies bring down their PUW to 1.4 or below.
  • S. food company Cargill announced plant-based immersion cooling for its facilities.
  • Facebook (Meta) has planned to shift all its existing facilities to liquid cooling.
  • Companies have also adopted free cooling, zero-water cooling, and others to reduce their environmental footprint.
  • Cologix replaced condensing units in its New Jersey facility with air-cooling units supplied by Carrier.
  • T5 Data Centers deploy air-cooled chillers on all of its facilities.
  • QTS Realty Trust uses in-house developed zero-water cooling in all its new facilities.
  • Innovative cooling techniques, such as underwater data centers and free chillers-based cooling technologies, bring in more efficiency in data center cooling.
  • In September 2022, The Backblaze signed 1MW of a facility at Nautilus’s floating data center in Stockton, California.
  • Apple uses a water-cooling process based on plants in Reno, Nevada, and Maiden, North Carolina, facilities.

General Construction - Increasing Adoption of Sustainable Material in Construction of Data Centers in the U.S.

  • Hyperscale operators like AWS, Microsoft, Apple, and Google are taking the lead in using sustainable materials to construct facilities.
  • In their facilities construction, companies introduce technologies like green concrete, modular data centers, and more.
  • AWS and American Rock Products collaborate to develop sustainable concrete for a concrete mix for its facility.
  • Facebook (Meta) announced that it had developed a sustainable low-carbon concrete with the help of Ozinga, its concrete partner, and the University of Illinois for its DeKalb data center.
  • Compass Datacenters is building facilities using concrete manufactured through the process developed by CarbonCure Technologies, which recaptures environmental CO2.
  • The use of software and construction of facilities like waste treatment plants is taking center stage in newer data center developments in the U.S.
  • CoreSite has installed waste treatment-related new equipment like haulers, compactors, etc., at its various data centers across the U.S.
  • Data centers are using green walls to cover their facilities
  • T5 Data Center has partnered with nZero for carbon tracking across its facilities

Segmentation By Infrastructure

  • Electrical Infrastructure
  • Mechanical Infrastructure
  • General Construction

GEOGRAPHICAL ANALYSIS

  • Site-Selection for facilities across the U.S. will depend mostly on access to renewable energy.
  • South-Eastern U.S. market will remain a hotspot of data center development in the near future, with more companies flocking to the region.
  • Due to the lack of land and renewable energy availability in the North-East U.S., it will be the least preferred region for companies to set up the data center.
  • The U.S. green data center market will witness increased interest from real estate and private equity firms entering the market, either by establishing a data center business unit or through joint ventures with operators to invest in hyperscale projects.

Segmentation By Geography

  • United States
  • South-Eastern U.S.
  • Mid-Western U.S.
  • South-Western U.S.
  • Western U.S.
  • North-Eastern U.S.

Key Vendors

  • Aligned
  • Amazon Web Services (AWS)
  • Apple
  • Cologix
  • Compass Datacenters
  • CoreSite (American Tower)
  • CyrusOne
  • Cyxtera Technologies
  • DataBank
  • DartPoints
  • Digital Realty
  • EdgeConneX
  • Equinix
  • Facebook (Meta)
  • Flexential
  • Google
  • H5 Data Centers
  • IBM
  • Iron Mountain
  • Microsoft
  • Nautilus Data Technologies
  • Novva Data Centers
  • Oracle
  • Prime Data Centers
  • Sabey Data Centers
  • Serverfarm
  • STACK Infrastructure
  • Stream Data Centers
  • Switch
  • T5 Data Centers
  • TierPoint
  • Vantage Data Centers

Power Vendors

  • Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp.
  • Apex Clean Energy
  • Avangrid Renewables
  • DE Shaw Renewable Investments
  • Dominion Energy
  • EDF Renewables
  • Enel Group
  • Engie
  • First Solar
  • Leeward Renewable Energy
  • Invenergy LLC
  • Lightsource bp
  • NextEra Energy
  • Pattern Energy
  • Rocky Mountain Power
  • Shell
  • Solar Alliance Energy Inc.
  • The AES Corporation
  • Torch Clean Energy
  • TotalEnergies
  • Vitol Energy

KEY QUESTIONS ANSWERED:

  • How big is the U.S. green data center market?
  • What is the growth rate of the U.S. green data center market?
  • What are the latest U.S. green data center market trends?
  • Which region holds the largest U.S. green data center market share?
  • How much MW of power capacity is expected to reach the U.S. green data center market by 2028?

Table of Contents

1 Research Methodology

2 Research Objectives

3 Research Process

4 Scope & Coverage
4.1 Market Definition
4.2 Base Year
4.3 Scope of the Study
4.4 Market Segments
4.4.1 Market Segmentation by Infrastructure
4.4.2 Market Segmentation by Geography

5 Report Assumptions & Caveats
5.1 Key Caveats
5.2 Currency Conversion
5.3 Market Derivation

6 Premium Insights
6.1 Report Overview
6.1.1 Key Highlights
6.1.2 Key Trends Impacting Us Green Data Center Market
6.1.3 Geographical Analysis
6.1.4 Segmental Analysis
6.1.5 Key Market Participants

7 Market at a Glance

8 Introduction
8.1 Overview
8.1.1 Green Data Center Metrics
8.2 Power Usage Effectiveness (Pue)
8.3 Policy Drivers
8.3.1 the Imasons Climate Accord ( Ica)
8.3.2 Re100
8.3.3 Energy Certifications
8.3.4 Greenhouse Gas Protocol, Paris Agreement and the Science Based Targets Initiative (Sbti)
8.4 Moving Toward Green Environment and Energy
8.5 Renewable & Green Energy Adoption Among Data Center Operators
8.5.1 Hyperscale Operators Stacking Up on Renewable Energy Ppas
8.5.2 Renewable Energy Adoption by Colocation Service Providers

9 Market Opportunities & Trends
9.1 Adoption of Advanced Ups Batteries
9.1.1 Lithium-Ion Battery
9.1.2 Liquid Metal Battery
9.1.3 Sodium-Ion Batteries
9.1.4 Nickel Zinc Batteries
9.2 Adoption of Advanced Fuel Sources
9.2.1 Fuel Cells
9.2.2 Hydrogen Vegetable Oil
9.2.3 Natural Gas Generators
9.2.4 Nuclear Energy Generation
9.2.5 Other Innovations
9.3 Adoption of Advanced Cooling Technologies
9.3.1 Free Cooling
9.3.2 Liquid Immersion Cooling
9.3.3 Underwater Data Centers
9.3.4 Floating Data Centers
9.3.5 Other Innovation
9.4 Innovation in Data Center Construction
9.4.1 Green Concrete
9.4.2 Modular Data Center
9.4.3 Other Innovation
9.5 Innovation in Power Utilities
9.5.1 Microgrid
9.5.2 Smart Grid
9.6 Ai, Metaverse, Hpc, & Cloud Computing Increasing Liquid Cooling Requirements

10 Market Growth Enablers
10.1 Renewable Energy Initiatives by Hyperscale & Cloud Operators
10.2 Renewable Energy Initiatives by Colocation & Enterprise Operators
10.2.1 Initiatives by Colocation Data Center Operators
10.2.2 Initiatives by Enterprise Data Center Operators/Customers
10.3 Adoption of Ai and Other Technologies in Data Center Construction
10.4 Government Push for Green Data Center Development
10.4.1 Federal Government Regulations
10.4.2 State Government Regulation

11 Market Restraints
11.1 Rising Carbon Emissions from Data Centers
11.2 Water Consumption by Data Centers
11.3 Disturbing Weather Patterns Across US
11.4 Site Selection and Development Constraints
11.4.1 Lack of Space
11.4.2 Power Constraint
11.4.3 Data Center Activism
11.5 Other Challenges

12 Market Landscape
12.1 Market Overview
12.2 Investment Market Size & Forecast
12.3 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
12.4 Five Forces Analysis
12.4.1 Threat of New Entrants
12.4.2 Bargaining Power of Suppliers
12.4.3 Bargaining Power of Buyers
12.4.4 Threat of Substitutes
12.4.5 Competitive Rivalry

13 Infrastructure
13.1 Market Snapshot & Growth Engine
13.2 Market Overview
13.3 Electrical Infrastructure
13.3.1 Market Overview
13.3.2 Market Size & Forecast
13.4 Mechanical Infrastructure
13.4.1 Market Overview
13.4.2 Market Size & Forecast
13.5 General Construction
13.5.1 Market Overview
13.5.2 Market Size & Forecast

14 Geography
14.1 Investment: Market Snapshot & Growth Engine
14.2 Power Capacity: Market Snapshot & Growth Engine
14.3 South-Eastern US
14.3.1 Market Snapshot & Growth Engine
14.3.2 Market Overview
14.3.3 Investments: Market Size & Forecast
14.3.4 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
14.4 Mid-Western US
14.4.1 Market Snapshot and Growth Engine
14.4.2 Market Overview
14.4.3 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
14.4.4 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
14.5 South-Western US
14.5.1 Market Snapshot and Growth Engine
14.5.2 Market Overview
14.5.3 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
14.5.4 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
14.6 Western US
14.6.1 Market Snapshot and Growth Engine
14.6.2 Market Overview
14.6.3 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
14.6.4 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
14.7 North-Eastern US
14.7.1 Market Snapshot and Growth Engine
14.7.2 Market Overview
14.7.3 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
14.7.4 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast

15 Competitive Landscape
15.1 Competition Overview
15.2 Renewable Energy Providers

16 Key Vendors
16.1 Aligned
16.1.1 Business Overview
16.1.2 Service Offerings
16.1.3 Sustainability
16.2 Amazon Web Services (Aws)
16.2.1 Business Overview
16.2.2 Service Offerings
16.2.3 Sustainability
16.3 Apple
16.3.1 Business Overview
16.3.2 Service Offerings
16.3.3 Sustainability
16.4 Cologix
16.4.1 Business Overview
16.4.2 Service Offering
16.4.3 Sustainability
16.5 Compass Datacenters
16.5.1 Business Overview
16.5.2 Service Offerings
16.5.3 Sustainability
16.6 Coresite (American Tower)
16.6.1 Business Overview
16.6.2 Service Offerings
16.6.3 Sustainability
16.7 Cyrusone
16.7.1 Business Overview
16.7.2 Services Offering
16.7.3 Sustainability
16.8 Cyxtera Technologies
16.8.1 Business Overview
16.8.2 Service Offerings
16.8.3 Sustainability
16.9 Databank
16.9.1 Business Overview
16.9.2 Service Offerings
16.9.3 Sustainability
16.10 Dartpoints
16.10.1 Business Overview
16.10.2 Service Offerings
16.10.3 Sustainability
16.11 Digital Realty
16.11.1 Business Overview
16.11.2 Service Offerings
16.11.3 Sustainability
16.12 Edgeconnex (Eqt Infrastructure)
16.12.1 Business Overview
16.12.2 Service Offerings
16.12.3 Sustainability
16.13 Equinix
16.13.1 Business Overview
16.13.2 Service Offerings
16.13.3 Sustainability
16.14 Facebook (Meta)
16.14.1 Business Overview
16.14.2 Service Offerings
16.14.3 Sustainability
16.15 Flexential
16.15.1 Business Overview
16.15.2 Service Offerings
16.15.3 Sustainability
16.16 Google
16.16.1 Business Overview
16.16.2 Service Offerings
16.16.3 Sustainability
16.17 H5 Data Centers
16.17.1 Business Overview
16.17.2 Service Offering
16.17.3 Sustainability
16.18 Ibm
16.18.1 Business Overview
16.18.2 Service Offering
16.18.3 Sustainability
16.19 Iron Mountain
16.19.1 Business Overview
16.19.2 Service Offerings
16.19.3 Sustainability
16.20 Microsoft
16.20.1 Business Overview
16.20.2 Service Offerings
16.20.3 Sustainability
16.21 Nautilus Data Technologies
16.21.1 Business Overview
16.21.2 Service Offerings
16.21.3 Sustainability
16.22 Novva Data Centers
16.22.1 Business Overview
16.22.2 Services Offering
16.22.3 Sustainability
16.23 Oracle
16.23.1 Business Overview
16.23.2 Service Offerings
16.23.3 Sustainability
16.24 Prime Data Centers
16.24.1 Business Overview
16.24.2 Services Offering
16.24.3 Sustainability
16.25 Sabey Data Centers
16.25.1 Business Overview
16.25.2 Service Offering
16.25.3 Sustainability
16.26 Serverfarm
16.26.1 Business Overview
16.26.2 Service Offering
16.26.3 Sustainability
16.27 Stack Infrastructure
16.27.1 Business Overview
16.27.2 Service Offering
16.27.3 Sustainability
16.28 Stream Data Centers
16.28.1 Business Overview
16.28.2 Services Offering
16.28.3 Sustainability
16.29 Switch
16.29.1 Business Overview
16.29.2 Service Offerings
16.29.3 Sustainability
16.3 T5 Data Centers
16.30.1 Business Overview
16.30.2 Service Offering
16.30.3 Sustainability
16.31 Tierpoint
16.31.1 Business Overview
16.31.2 Service Offerings
16.31.3 Sustainability
16.32 Vantage Data Centers
16.32.1 Business Overview
16.32.2 Service Offering
16.32.3 Sustainability

17 Power Vendors
17.1 Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp.
17.1.1 Business Overview
17.1.2 Service Offerings
17.2 Apex Clean Energy
17.2.1 Business Overview
17.2.2 Service Offerings
17.3 Avangrid Renewables
17.3.1 Business Overview
17.3.2 Service Offerings
17.4 De Shaw Renewable Investments
17.4.1 Business Overview
17.4.2 Service Offerings
17.5 Dominion Energy
17.5.1 Business Overview
17.5.2 Product/Service Offerings
17.6 Edf Renewables
17.6.1 Business Overview
17.6.2 Service Offerings
17.7 Enel Group
17.7.1 Business Overview
17.7.2 Service Offerings
17.8 Engie
17.8.1 Business Overview
17.8.2 Service Offerings
17.9 First Solar
17.9.1 Business Overview
17.9.2 Service Offerings
17.10 Leeward Renewable Energy
17.10.1 Business Overview
17.10.2 Service Offerings
17.11 Invenergy LLC
17.11.1 Business Overview
17.11.2 Service Offerings
17.12 Lightsource Bp
17.12.1 Business Overview
17.12.2 Service Offerings
17.13 Nextera Energy
17.13.1 Business Overview
17.13.2 Service Offerings
17.14 Pattern Energy
17.14.1 Business Overview
17.14.2 Service Offerings
17.15 Rocky Mountain Power
17.15.1 Business Overview
17.15.2 Service Offerings
17.16 Shell
17.16.1 Business Overview
17.16.2 Service Offerings
17.17 Solar Alliance Energy
17.17.1 Business Overview
17.17.2 Service Offerings
17.18 the Aes Corporation
17.18.1 Business Overview
17.18.2 Product and Service Offerings
17.19 Torch Clean Energy
17.19.1 Business Overview
17.19.2 Service Offerings
17.2 Totalenergies
17.20.1 Business Overview
17.20.2 Service Offerings
17.21 Vitol Energy
17.21.1 Business Overview
17.21.2 Services Offering

18 Report Summary
18.1 Key Takeaways

19 Quantitative Summary
19.1 Us Green Data Center Market
19.1.1 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
19.1.2 Infrastructure: Market Size & Forecasts
19.2 Market by Geography
19.2.1 Investment: Market Size & Forecast
19.2.2 Power Capacity: Market Size & Forecast
19.4 US
19.4.1 Overall Market

20 Appendix
20.1 Abbreviations

Companies Mentioned

  • Aligned
  • Amazon Web Services (AWS)
  • Apple
  • Cologix
  • Compass Datacenters
  • CoreSite (American Tower)
  • CyrusOne
  • Cyxtera Technologies
  • DataBank
  • DartPoints
  • Digital Realty
  • EdgeConneX
  • Equinix
  • Facebook (Meta)
  • Flexential
  • Google
  • H5 Data Centers
  • IBM
  • Iron Mountain
  • Microsoft
  • Nautilus Data Technologies
  • Novva Data Centers
  • Oracle
  • Prime Data Centers
  • Sabey Data Centers
  • Serverfarm
  • STACK Infrastructure
  • Stream Data Centers
  • Switch
  • T5 Data Centers
  • TierPoint
  • Vantage Data Centers
  • Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp.
  • Apex Clean Energy
  • Avangrid Renewables
  • DE Shaw Renewable Investments
  • Dominion Energy
  • EDF Renewables
  • Enel Group
  • Engie
  • First Solar
  • Leeward Renewable Energy
  • Invenergy LLC
  • Lightsource bp
  • NextEra Energy
  • Pattern Energy
  • Rocky Mountain Power
  • Shell
  • Solar Alliance Energy Inc.
  • The AES Corporation
  • Torch Clean Energy
  • TotalEnergies
  • Vitol Energy

Methodology


Our research comprises a mix of primary and secondary research. The secondary research sources that are typically referred to include, but are not limited to, company websites, annual reports, financial reports, company pipeline charts, broker reports, investor presentations and SEC filings, journals and conferences, internal proprietary databases, news articles, press releases, and webcasts specific to the companies operating in any given market.

Primary research involves email interactions with the industry participants across major geographies. The participants who typically take part in such a process include, but are not limited to, CEOs, VPs, business development managers, market intelligence managers, and national sales managers. We primarily rely on internal research work and internal databases that we have populated over the years. We cross-verify our secondary research findings with the primary respondents participating in the study.



 

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