Solutions & InnovationArticle
Sustainability in Action: The Aalsmeer Energy Hub
March 15, 2022
Achieving fossil-free electricity use by 2040 is no small undertaking. One Dutch city is taking a unique, groundbreaking approach.
Solutions & InnovationArticle
March 15, 2022
Achieving fossil-free electricity use by 2040 is no small undertaking. One Dutch city is taking a unique, groundbreaking approach.
We’re helping solve our customers’ big challenges by innovating and delivering solutions that are better for their business - and for the environment.
Project At-a-Glance:
The opportunity: to advance the City of Aalsmeer’s goal of fossil-free electricity use by 2040 with a novel approach to capture and recycle heat generated by NorthC Datacenters as a source of heat for surrounding facilities.
The solution: a custom electric heat recovery system.
Sustainability outcomes:
Often referred to as the flower capital of the world, the City of Aalsmeer, located 30 minutes southwest of Amsterdam, draws thousands of visitors each year – many touring the renowned Royal FloraHolland auction and its 30,000 flower and plant species.
While the colorful accolade is certainly notable, Aalsmeer touts an even more impressive distinction: the goal of fossil-free electricity use by 2040, paralleling other significant climate goals across the Netherlands.
The commitment is no small undertaking, but a unique group of local entities – with different, yet shared interests – is already paving the way for progress. Brought together by their common sustainability goals and motivation to reduce community-wide carbon emissions, the municipality – along with NorthC Datacenters, a local sports complex, a childcare center and a nearby plant nursery – joined forces to create the Aalsmeer Energy Hub.
Data centers require significant cooling to run at optimum performance levels since their servers produce abundant heat, which is often collected by an HVAC system and expelled into the external environment – as was the case with NorthC Datacenters.
Any heat released into the environment can be considered wasted – and since it takes energy to produce heat, wasted heat is wasted energy. A better, more environmentally friendly route can be taken: capture and recycle it as a heat source for other functions. This can be done inside the same building, or for other locations in the community.
The choice was an easy one for Aalsmeer Energy Hub’s partners. Recognizing an opportunity to utilize wasted heat as a mechanism for reducing community electricity consumption and carbon emissions, while helping the sports complex, childcare facility and plant nursery shift away from using gas fired boilers, the groundbreaking project was officially launched in 2019.
Aalsmeer Energy Hub collaborated with Trane Technologies’ local team on developing a custom electric heat recovery system, leveraging Trane® CITY RTSF screw compressor heat pumps to capture excess heat from NorthC Datacenters and transfer it via heated water to the other three locations. Conversely, chilled water from those facilities returned to the datacenter – providing its necessary cooling requirements. This energy transfer delivered a lower base temperature at NorthC Datacenters, significantly reducing the electricity needed to create an optimal temperature within the facility.
Additionally, the combination of the heat pump’s low-GWP refrigerant (R-1234ze), a large, on-site solar array providing its electricity, and the ability to reach 80 degrees Celsius output, enabled a nearly zero emission system.
“It starts with knowledge about the possibilities,” says Jeroen Roos, partner for Infinitus Energy Solutions Group, which helped consult on the project. “I think a lot of people don’t know it is rather easy to heat and cool your building with heat pumps, so it starts with educating people on their economic, and other, advantages. In the future, this municipality will have the right to eliminate natural gas from certain areas, and I think more and more people are starting to prepare for that situation. The impossibility of using natural gas in the future is very important.”
“I think a lot of people don’t know it is rather easy to heat and cool your building with heat pumps, so it starts with educating people on their economic, and other, advantages.”
Jeroen Roos
partner for Infinitus Energy Solutions Group
By embracing bold innovation and advanced technologies, the Aalsmeer Energy Hub project is a quintessential case study for accelerated decarbonization.
Previously wasted heat from NorthC Datacenters is now captured and dispersed to the childcare center, plant nursery and sports complex – all of which are achieving cost reductions and natural gas use. The closed loop system has decreased natural gas use, enabled a transition to low-GWP refrigerant and improved the overall energy efficiency of all facilities, avoiding nearly 400 metric tons of CO2 emissions annually – equivalent to the energy used by 48 homes each year. Additionally, all Aalsmeer Energy Hub partners are saving a cumulative ~210MWh in electricity annually.
Aalsmeer Energy Hub’s dedicated commitments, innovative strategy and symbiotic relationship is enabling a greener, more sustainable future – one that is free from fossil fuel use, with significant emissions reductions.
Recommended for you
Solutions & Innovation Article
Innovating for Impact: 19th Asian GamesMay 03, 2024
Trane® provides sustainable and efficient indoor climate solutions for the venues of the 19th Asian Games held in Hangzhou, China.
Solutions & Innovation Article
Innovating for Impact: Thermo King® and RTRApril 30, 2024
Thermo King EMEA delivers on its pledge to provide customers like RTR Holland fully electric, zero direct emission refrigeration solutions for every segment of the cold chain.
Solutions & Innovation Article
Innovating for Impact: Thermo King® hybrid-electric multi-temp trailer debuts in ChicagoApril 26, 2024
Solutions & Innovation Article
Innovating for Impact: New HVAC a beautiful thing in the home of interior design celebrity Leanne FordApril 17, 2024
When designer Leanne Ford set out to modernize her historic Pittsburgh home, she looked to Trane® for a solution that increased efficiency, sustainability and indoor air quality.
Photo by Amy Neunsinger; Styled by Hilary Robertson