ComputerWeekly.com 09月29日
微电网或成数据中心更优能源方案
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根据净零中心(CNZ)的研究,英国政府应考虑扩大可再生微电网的普及,将其作为比建设核小型模块化反应堆(SMR)更经济、更快的替代方案,以满足数据中心的能源需求。CNZ分析显示,在英国部署更多可再生微电网可更快、更经济地满足数据中心日益增长的能源需求。英国目前有523个数据中心,是全球第三高的国家,至少还有九个正在开发中。CNZ的研究表明,可再生微电网可以满足大型数据中心的大部分电力需求。微电网通常利用可再生资源发电,然后储存在电池中,独立于主电网运行。研究比较了三种为120MW数据中心供电的方案:核SMR、包含海上风电、太阳能和电池存储的微电网(少量天然气辅助),以及缺乏太阳能的土地受限场景微电网。分析发现,使用可再生能源和少量天然气为120MW数据中心供电的成本比核SMR低约43%。

🌿 英国目前有523个数据中心,是全球第三高的国家,至少还有九个正在开发中。CNZ的研究表明,可再生微电网可以满足大型数据中心的大部分电力需求。

🔋 微电网通常利用可再生资源发电,然后储存在电池中,独立于主电网运行。它们可以用于为单个建筑物供电,或者多个微电网可以连接在一起为大型开发项目供电。

💰 研究比较了三种为120MW数据中心供电的方案:核SMR、包含海上风电、太阳能和电池存储的微电网(少量天然气辅助),以及缺乏太阳能的土地受限场景微电网。分析发现,使用可再生能源和少量天然气为120MW数据中心供电的成本比核SMR低约43%。

📈 CNZ指出,英国数据中心市场在未来十年中可能带来44亿英镑的经济效益,而能源和数字未来的关键决策窗口期正在缩小。

🔧 英国政府正在推动清洁能源目标,计划在2030年实现能源网格的清洁化,并已委托罗尔斯·罗伊斯SMR公司建造英国首批SMR,预计将在2030年代连接到电网。

<p>The government should consider expanding the availability of renewable microgrids as a cheaper and faster alternative to building nuclear small modular reactors (SMRs) to meet the energy needs of datacentres, according to the Centre for Net Zero (CNZ).</p><div class="ad-wrapper ad-embedded"> <div id="halfpage" class="ad ad-hp"> <script>GPT.display('halfpage')</script> </div> <div id="mu-1" class="ad ad-mu"> <script>GPT.display('mu-1')</script> </div> </div> <p>The government is championing the use of nuclear small modular reactors (SMRs) as a possible answer to shoring up the nation’s energy supplies, as part of its push to get UK energy grids running on clean energy by 2030.</p> <p>However, the CNZ, which is a research institute focused on predicting future energy demands, said its analysis shows that expanding the number of renewable microgrids across the UK could offer a faster and more cost-effective way of meeting the growing energy needs of the nation’s burgeoning number of datacentres.</p> <p>“The UK is currently host to 523 datacentres, the third-highest of any nation globally, with at least nine more in development. The country is currently deciding how to power its datacentres of the future – and at what speed,” said the CNZ. “As the UK seeks to grow its AI sector in the context of the Clean Power 2030 target, CNZ’s research indicates that renewable microgrids could meet the majority of a large datacentre’s electricity needs.”</p> <p>Microgrids typically generate electricity with the help of renewable sources, which is then stored in battery packs until it is needed, and are operated independently of main electricity grids. They can be used to power single buildings, or blocks of them can be knitted together to supply power to large-scale developments.</p> <p>“The UK needs to build five times more transmission infrastructure in the next five years than was built in the last three decades, which will be a lengthy and expensive process,” said the CNZ. “This makes circumventing the grid and connecting directly to new sources of power, via microgrids and private wires, increasingly appealing – especially since fixed costs to build and maintain the grid are loaded onto consumer electricity bills.”</p> <p>In its research, the CNZ sought to examine whether renewable microgrids could consistently meet the high demand for energy from datacentres, and how their performance stacks up against SMRs, in terms of cost, speed and carbon impact.</p> <p>It did this by analysing three scenarios for powering a 120MW datacentre. The first involved using nuclear SMRs, and the second used a microgrid comprising offshore wind and solar with battery storage, with small amounts of gas for supplementary support. The third option involved the use of a microgrid that lacked a supply of solar energy in a land-constrained scenario. Its analysis found that it is approximately 43% cheaper<b> </b>to power a 120MW datacentre with renewables and small amounts of gas than with a nuclear SMR.&nbsp;</p> <p>“A microgrid comprising offshore wind, solar, battery storage, and gas supporting, would be 43.4% cheaper to run annually compared to procuring power from a nuclear SMR. The cost saving falls slightly to 42.1% if you remove solar generation,” said the CNZ.</p> <p>“A 95% renewable microgrid with gas backup – the goal for Clean Power 2030 – was modelled at almost a third (31.7%) lower cost than the SMR case in today’s prices. In future, higher use of renewables will become even more cost-competitive if technology and storage costs continue to fall compared to gas.”</p> <p>The CNZ said its research also showed that renewable energy sources can meet 80% of a datacentre’s demands over the course of a year, but gas is required as a stopgap to achieve the most cost-optimal model of powering a datacentre with battery support.</p> <p>“Higher volumes of batteries would reduce the reliance on gas power – this is likely to happen over time as costs [of batteries] fall,” said the CNZ. “Similarly, building more renewables (offshore wind and solar) would help microgrids meet even more datacentre demand.”</p> <p>The research follows the findings of a poll of FT 250 executives, published by the Energy Networks Association (ENA), which expressed misgivings about the future prosperity of the <a href="https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366631872/FT-250-executives-call-for-UK-grid-upgrades-to-support-AI-datacentre-expansion-plans"&gt;UK’s digital economy if the electrical grids underpinning the nation’s datacentres are not urgently upgraded</a>. &nbsp;</p> <p>According to the UK government’s own figures, domestic datacentre capacity could rise to between 3.3GW and 6.3GW by 2030, mainly due to the growing demand for AI workloads, which will place further pressure on the grid.</p> <p>Ramping up the availability of SMRs is being offered up as a solution in the longer term, as the UK also grapples with its bid to become a clean energy superpower. In June 2025, the government confirmed that it had commissioned Rolls-Royce SMR to build the country’s first SMRs, which are <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/news/rolls-royce-smr-selected-to-build-small-modular-nuclear-reactors"&gt;expected to be connected to the grid some time in the 2030s.</a>&nbsp;</p> <p>In the meantime, the National Grid has also committed to adding more capacity to the grid – <a href="https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366625161/National-Grid-starts-building-large-scale-substation-to-support-growth-of-West-London-datacentres"&gt;including recently on the outskirts of Greater London</a> – where a high proportion of the nation’s datacentres are located.</p> <p>The National Grid has also recently announced a partnership where AI would be used to flexibly adjust how much <a href="https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366631284/National-Grid-partners-with-AI-firm-to-test-dynamic-management-of-datacentre-energy-demands"&gt;power AI datacentres draw from the grid, as part of a push to reduce the burden these facilities put on UK power supplies</a>.</p> <p>Izzy Woolgar, director of external affairs at the CNZ, said the research highlights the role that renewable technologies could play in helping the UK swiftly meet the energy demands of its growing datacentre sector.</p> <p>“There is potentially £44bn on the table for the UK economy from datacentres over the next decade, and the window of opportunity is narrow to make key decisions for our energy and digital future,” she said.</p> <p>“While nuclear SMRs may play an important role in the UK’s future energy mix, our analysis suggests renewables offer a cost-competitive, proven solution for meeting new energy demand in the short term, in the context of our clean power ambitions.”&nbsp;</p> <div class="extra-info"> <div class="extra-info-inner"> <h3 class="splash-heading">Read more about datacentres and energy</h3> <ul class="default-list"> <li><a href="https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366631284/National-Grid-partners-with-AI-firm-to-test-dynamic-management-of-datacentre-energy-demands"&gt;National Grid is partnering with Emerald AI for a live trial to test how the pressure artificial</a> intelligence datacentres place on the grid could be altered according to workload demands.</li> <li><a href="https://www.computerweekly.com/news/366621028/The-datacentre-energy-deficit-How-worried-should-operators-be-about-power-outages"&gt;The UK government’s plans to lower the barriers to new datacentre developments</a>&nbsp;have left industry watchers querying how all these server farms will be powered. But are they worrying about nothing?</li> </ul> </div></div>

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可再生微电网 数据中心 核小型模块化反应堆 能源需求 清洁能源
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