Newsflash: your data is dirty. That fluffy cloud up there isn’t a real thing, where your photos from 2010 are floating peacefully in a rainbow fog. I know. You never really considered it before, but, it’s a problem, because everyone is dumping their files into the atmosphere, literally, and we don’t give it a second thought. Ta-da! Here we are to shed a little light on the subject!
Let’s do an experiment. Take a look at the number of songs in the playlists you’ve got. Then consider the number of streaming services you subscribe to, and the number of hours you spend watching or listening to them. Social media accounts? They’re rife with data too. Now check your email and Google Drive. How many files? Then, check that special place where pictures go to die - how many photos and videos do you have stored?
I’m guessing a whole ton. Gigabytes upon gigabytes of saved data. Now, imagine what it would look like if we went back 30 years, and all those things were actually in your house in real life, in real time. How many rooms of mail and documents would you have? How many storage containers of files would you need? How many CDs, DVDs, newspapers, magazines, books and photo albums? I’m guessing a whole lot more than you could cram into your space.
When we had to physically handle our own paperwork, and develop expensive film into photos, we were more discriminating. After all, who needs a whole room dedicated to junk mail? But, here in the shiny new digital age, we have gotten lazy when it comes to cleaning house. After all, it’s just an unopened email or two (or 1000), and how bad could a bunch of photos you’ll never look at really be? Well, surprisingly, pretty bad. Let’s investigate.
Just like a houseful of documents, all those electronic files have to be stored somewhere. They’re not just floating around all innocent, even though that’s what we’ve been encouraged to believe. All that storage occurs on servers somewhere, and those servers need energy to run. Data centres that house all this storage must run 24/7, and require massive amounts of energy to cool them.
It’s estimated that the amount of energy required to service our digital storage is equal or greater to the amount of energy the airline industry uses. It’s a lot. It’s about 2% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
In the US, streaming music dumps between 25,000 - 40,000 tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere annually. Netflix and other streaming services are a big part of the problem too, and as televisions get bigger, resolution gets sharper, and length of shows gets longer, even more energy is required to service them. It’s estimated that by 2025, the technology sector will consume 25% of the world’s total electricity, and world annual traffic will increase by 60%, to 175 Zettabytes (175 trillion gigabytes), with cloud computing as the driving force. That's astronomical.
Now, let’s talk about photo storage. It’s oh so easy to take 20 pictures when one would do. Then, upload them, and forget about them. I confess that I have lost complete control of my photo files, and now have absolutely no idea where anything is. I have multiple copies in multiple folders, and I regularly spend hours trying to make sense of it only to retreat and fight another day. I’m pretty sure I’m not alone.
Email is yet another dirty secret, where hundreds of files clutter up servers and suck up energy unnecessarily. So you get the picture. We’re virtually storing way more stuff than we need to, and while cloud computing has become a norm of society, there are things that can be done to mitigate the damage.
Cloud storage is dominated by many big players - Google, Amazon, Apple. To their credit, some are working toward net zero emissions. Unfortunately, the big sound bytes about net zero haven’t actually played out for many of them. Google has been carbon neutral since 2007 due to using renewables and carbon offsets. Amazon, unfortunately one of the biggest players, is still only offsetting 50% of its massive emissions despite its pledge, and still heavily using coal and other fossil fuels. If we look beyond North America, places that do not have access to renewables are powering and cooling their servers with fossil fuels.
So while we’re waiting on the world to change, let’s roll up our sleeves. Here are some ways to help you tackle that virtual hoarding. |
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