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Monday, January 29, 2001
Article

Net gets the blame for blackout
by Melinda Wittstock

A power struggle is raging in California where there is not enough electricity to keep the lights on, but more than enough blame to go around — even if a bickering array of politicians, financiers, environmentalists, consumers and technology moguls cannot agree on who or what sparked the energy crisis that has plunged large areas of the state into darkness.

One thing everyone can agree on is that the crisis, officially a state of emergency in what would be the world’s seventh-largest economy, can only get much worse. The rolling blackouts are already reverberating through that economy — threatening everything from milk supplies to petrol deliveries.

While everything from the law, economy to weather is being blamed for the crisis, there is a fresh target for the wrath of the newly powerless: the Internet. Silicon Valley is accused of overloading California’s power infrastructure. A recent study suggests the Internet now accounts for 8 per cent of the national electricity consumption — and could come to consume between 30 and 50 per cent of it in 20 years. This statistic has been seized by President George W. Bush as he seeks to justify an energy policy that will allow oil drilling and coal mining in the pristine wilderness of Alaska — but the figures are spurious, say some analysts.

 


The Internet, after all, was supposed to conserve energy by making businesses run more efficiently — and it was widely believed that computers and wireless devices use much less energy than refrigerators or washing machines.

Not so, say the two free-market conservative analysts powering the blame-the-Internet movement. Mark Mills and Peter Huber of the Digital Power Report and the coal industry-funded Greening Earth Society, insist a Palm Pilot uses as much energy as a refrigerator — citing invisible `back-end’ network and telecommunications infrastructure such as routers, servers and digital transmission systems for the surge in electricity use. Power consumption in Silicon Valley, they say, has been growing at three times the rate of the rest of California’s — with Oracle, Intel, Sun Microsystems and the like using the same mega-wattage as "a steel mill."

But others say that’s simply "ridiculous." Steven Taub, an analyst with Cambridge Energy Research Associates, says: "It doesn’t take a lot of steel mills shutting down to offset increased demand from computers. You just can’t blame my Palm Pilot for this crisis — it runs on two triple-A batteries! But the tech economy behind those devices has led to an unprecedented economic boom — and that means bigger houses, more appliances, more offices — and more demand for electricity." Jonathan Koomey, a scientist and the group leader of the End-Use Forecasting Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratories in Berkeley, says the blackouts are not related to any such rapid increase in demand. He cites statistics from the California Energy Commission showing only a 2 per cent growth rate in electricity demand in the late 1990s at the height of the e-boom, compared with a growth rate of 3.3 per cent in the late 1980s.

"The people who want to build power plants would like everyone to think that there is a huge growth in demand so we can reduce environmental regulations," says Koomey. "I think we have to build power plants, yes, but I also think people are trying to create a sense of urgency to make it easier for them to argue for their interests." Intel chief executive Craig Barrett is among a growing group of tech billionaires now pushing for the construction of new power plants as they try to avoid "lue screen death"—the loss of millions of dollars whenever power fluctuates, even for a fraction of a second, because the chips being manufactured can be ruined. Intel, which has been operating under what Barrett calls "mood lighting" between 4 pm and 7 pm when the company turns half its lights off voluntarily to conserve electricity, has already threatened to move some operations to Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico and even Israel and Ireland — unless, that is, new power plants get built, and fast.

Other giants such as Sun Microsystems, MCI WorldCom and Web site host Verio have resorted to diesel generators to keep their businesses humming — a trend now so pervasive that environmental regulators fear that diesel exhaust could soon add significantly to pollution.

Last Thursday, California lawmakers approved a $ US dollars 400 million plan to turn the lights back on. The bail-out will allow the state to buy power on the open market and provide it to the near-bankrupt utilities — Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison — at low cost. But the money won’t go far. State Senate leader John Burton said: "We can only see it getting worse." With no end in sight to the crisis, Californians stocked up on flashlights, candles and firewood, while hardware stores were swamped with requests from small businesses for generators.
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Then and now

An application was for employment

A program was a TV show

A cursor used profanity

A keyboard was a piano!

Memory was something that you lost with age

A CD was a bank account!

And if you had a broken disk,

It would hurt when you found out!

Compress was something you did to garbage

Not something you did to a file

And if you unzipped anything in public

You’d be in jail for a while!

Log on was adding wood to a fire

Hard drive was a long trip on the road

A mouse pad was where a mouse lived

And a backup happened to your commode!

Cut — you did with a pocketknife

Paste — you did with glue

A Web was a spider’s home

And a virus was the flu!

I guess I’ll stick to my pad and paper

And the memory in my head

I hear nobody’s been killed in a computer crash

But when it happens they wish they were dead!

(Source: The Internet)

 

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