Eirgrid chief backs case for review of data centre policy in Ireland
over 4 years in The Irish Times
Data centres, which consume large amounts of electricity, will be critical to a thriving Irish economy and to modern lifestyles in coming years, but a policy review is needed to evaluate their role backed by a new regulatory framework, the chief executive of Eirgrid Mark Foley has said.
Currently responsible for 1.58 per cent of Ireland’s carbon emissions, data centres are projected to use 29 per cent of Ireland’s total energy by 2028.
Eirgrid, which provides the electricity transmission system on the island of Ireland, has warned that by 2026 the twin demands of data centres and electric cars could exceed Ireland’s current energy supply.
Speaking at a webinar on renewable energy hosted by Green MEP Ciarán Cuffe, Mr Foley suggested that people needed to reflect on how important data has become in their lives.
The world was coming out of 15 months of working from home with Eirgrid, for instance, having a staff of 600 people all working remotely, he noted.
“We are in the middle of the biggest social and work experiment in human history, and technology has allowed us to get on with the job in the most extraordinary and emphatic and, indeed, surprising way,” he said.
“It’s a fact of modern life that data is ubiquitous in term of our business, in terms of how we communicate, our social lives, our entertainment; it’s everywhere.”
Data centres, he said however, “are big consumers of power,” and, in that light, “the policy regime around data centres definitely needs a further review, considering where we are now, and where we need to get to”.
This is required to ensure there was “a clear, rational policy pathway for the next 10 years about what Ireland is prepared to accommodate”, he said.
Total demand for electricity is expected to increase by up to 50 per cent by 2030 and “people are right to ask for a more sophisticated policy and regulatory framework than what we have had to date,” Mr Foley said.