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Published June 2013 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Data Center Demand Response: Avoiding the Coincident Peak via Workload Shifting and Local Generation

Abstract

Demand response is a crucial aspect of the future smart grid. It has the potential to provide significant peak demand reduction and to ease the incorporation of renewable energy into the grid. Data centers' participation in demand response is becoming increasingly important given the high and increasing energy consumption and the flexibility in demand management in data centers compared to conventional industrial facilities. In this extended abstract we briefly describe recent work in [1] on two demand response schemes to reduce a data center's peak loads and energy expenditure: workload shifting and the use of local power generations. In [1], we conduct a detailed characterization study of coincident peak data over two decades from Fort Collins Utilities, Colorado and then develop two algorithms for data centers by combining workload scheduling and local power generation to avoid the coincident peak and reduce the energy expenditure. The first algorithm optimizes the expected cost and the second one provides a good worst-case guarantee for any coincident peak pattern. We evaluate these algorithms via numerical simulations based on real world traces from production systems. The results show that using workload shifting in combination with local generation can provide significant cost savings (up to 40% in the Fort Collins Utilities' case) compared to either alone.

Additional Information

Copyright is held by the author/owner(s). This work was supported by NSF grants CNS 0846025, DoE grant DE-EE0002890, and HP Labs.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023