The Future of CRE Sustainability
Data centers now consume unprecedented amounts of electricity, but the industry hasn't abandoned sustainability. It's adapting at scale. Raul Saavedra [https://www.linkedin.com/in/raul-saavedra-126b033/], Vice Chair, Head of Data Center Advisory, Americas at Colliers [https://www.colliers.com/en], highlights how data center lease structures have shifted from full-service turnkey operations to core-and-shell triple net arrangements, driven by the massive scale of modern facilities and tenant preferences for control. This structural change redistributes sustainability responsibilities but doesn't diminish them, since hyperscale tenants maintain strong environmental commitments regardless of lease type. The conversation also turns to practical optimization strategies, including how data centers achieve better PUE, the key metric operators monitor to measure system efficiency and sustainability performance. Simple innovations like using outside air for natural cooling through louvers can dramatically reduce energy consumption. Looking ahead, Raul predicts a shift toward smaller, more manageable power distributions in metropolitan areas rather than today's massive centralized facilities. He also addresses common misconceptions, particularly around water usage, explaining how many data centers employ closed-loop recycling systems rather than consuming fresh water continuously. Topics discussed: * Data center lease structures shifting from turnkey full-service to core-and-shell triple net arrangements due to massive scale * PUE metrics as the primary sustainability measurement for data center operational efficiency and design performance * Outside air cooling through louvers that dramatically reduce energy consumption in data centers * Nuclear power gaining momentum as the preferred renewable energy source for data centers over solar and wind options * Water recycling misconceptions addressed through closed-loop systems that reuse rather than continuously consume fresh water resources * Investment mistakes in sustainable infrastructure driven by seeking immediate gratification instead of patient long-term capital approaches * Load flexibility agreements between hyperscale tenants and operators to manage production versus non-production energy demands * Future data center design trending toward smaller, distributed facilities with manageable power requirements in metropolitan markets
34 episodios
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