Sunya Get smarter about energy transition
  • Home
  • Industry News
  • Newsletter
  • Podcast
  • Contact Us
Sunya
Industry News
November 28, 2024

AWS uses lower carbon steel in the construction of new Swedish data centres

Newsfeed
AWS uses lower carbon steel in the construction of new Swedish data centres

Written by About Amazon Team

November 26, 2024

AWS expands Swedish Region with new data centres in Mälardalen.

As customer demand continues to grow, including for generative AI and machine learning services, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is investing to support their needs by expanding its data centre capacity. In the Europe (Stockholm) Region, it is currently building new data centres in three Availability Zones located in Eskilstuna, Katrineholm and Västerås. The main buildings are due for completion by mid-2025.

AWS is working with our supply chain to use lower-carbon concrete, steel, and other materials whenever possible. The construction industry is one of the largest and toughest sectors to decarbonize; embodied carbon—the emissions released during building materials’ life cycle, from extraction to manufacturing, transport, and construction to disposal—accounts for around 11% of global carbon emissions.

Sourcing lower carbon recycled steel for all our new data centres in Mälardalen

Roughly 70% of steel worldwide is made from iron ore via the blast furnace to basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) route which burns coal. Iron ore is melted and reduced to make iron in a blast furnace – and then the iron is converted into steel in a basic oxygen furnace. Coal and coke, a product made from coal, are responsible for the majority of steel’s CO₂ emissions.

Globally, AWS strives to use steel made by recycling scrap in electric arc furnaces (EAF). Roughly 30% of steel worldwide is made via this route, which doesn’t use coal or coke. Electricity is used instead – and often a small amount of natural gas. As a result, the scrap-EAF steel route has one-quarter of the carbon emissions associated with BF-BOF steel making. AWS has worked with our supply chain to ensure that at least 70% of structural steel used in our Eskilstuna and Västerås data centres will come from the scrap-EAF route, resulting in 10,000 fewer tonnes of embodied carbon emissions for our business.
For our data centre in Katrineholm, AWS has gone one step further. All the structural open steel sections will be produced from scrap melted in electric arc furnaces powered by 100% carbon-free electricity, with minimal (if any) use of natural gas. This results in one-seventh of the carbon emissions compared with BF-BOF steel making. This will result in our Katerineholm data centre excpected to contribute 5900 fewer tonnes of carbon to AWS’s emissions footprint than it otherwise would have.

Importantly though, scrap-EAF steel production is limited by how much waste steel and iron the world creates. The International Energy Agency forecasts there will only be enough steel scrap generated in 2050 to meet 45% of global demand. The world therefore needs to develop and rapidly deploy low-carbon technologies to make ‘primary’ or ‘virgin’ steel from iron ore.

Finding new sources of lower carbon primary steel for our data centres

In pursuit of new sources of lower carbon primary steel, AWS has teamed up with SSAB and its subsidiary, Ruukki Construction.

SSAB has together with iron ore company LKAB and energy company Vattenfall developed a new technology called HYBRIT (short for Hydrogen Breakthrough Ironmaking Technology) that uses hydrogen, made from carbon-free electricity, to make iron. This process emits water vapor instead of carbon dioxide. An Electric Arc Furnace (which is powered by carbon-free electricity) is then used to convert the iron to steel. This results in primary steel with one-tenth of the carbon emissions of conventional BF-BOF steelmaking. Steel from this innovative process will be used in AWS’s new data centre in Västerås.

“Reducing the embodied carbon associated with the construction of our data centers is a key priority for AWS as we work to achieve net-zero carbon across our operations by 2040. By partnering with innovative local companies like SSAB and Ruukki, we’re taking an important step to decarbonise the materials used in our data centres and set a new standard for sustainable infrastructure. We’re excited to be working with companies at the forefront of lower-carbon virgin steel production,” said Kellen O’Connor, Managing Director Europe North at AWS.

AWS is procuring low carbon primary steel that SSAB has made available from the HYBRIT pilot facility in Luleå, before production volumes increase. In a world-first for the data centre industry, the steel is being used in panels to clad the façade of a new data centre.

“We are thrilled to welcome AWS as a new partner. By choosing steel made with the HYBRIT technology, AWS shows it’s possible to reduce the carbon footprint of data centre construction regardless of whether the steel is made from scrap or virgin iron ore,” said Thomas Hörnfeldt, VP of Sustainable Business at SSAB.

“This is an exciting project that shows how well our solutions fit into the data centre segment. It is also a great example of how we, together with customers like AWS, can make construction more sustainable. SSAB Fossil-free™ steel and Ruukki® LowCarbon offerings are at the forefront in reducing emissions of construction,” said Per Göransson, Business Director, Building Envelopes, Scandinavia, Ruukki Construction.

TAGS: #industrynews
PREVIOUS ARTICLES
Home > Industry News
November 28, 2024

bp and partners give go-ahead for Tangguh UCC project in Papua Barat, Indonesia

NEXT ARTICLES
Home > Industry News
November 28, 2024

LPO Announces Conditional Commitment to Grain Belt Express to Construct High-Voltage Direct Current Transmission Project

Comments are closed.
Related Post
December 2, 2024
Brevik Carbon Capture Plant Reaches Mechanical Completion
February 6, 2025
Altus Power Announces Agreement to be Acquired
April 24, 2025
Smackover Lithium’s South West Arkansas Project Receives
April 14, 2025
Northampton Capital Partners Invests in Blueprint Data

Recent Posts

  • Prometheus Hyperscale, PureWest Energy and Frontier Infrastructure to Enable Zero-Carbon Power Solution for Flagship Wyoming Data Center
  • BKV and Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners Announce Strategic Carbon Capture Joint Venture With $500 Million Investment
  • Commonwealth LNG Signs 20-Year Sale and Purchase Agreement with Major Asian Buyer
  • Permian Resources Announces Strong First Quarter 2025 Results, Revised 2025 Guidance and Strategic Bolt-On Acquisition of Core Northern Delaware Basin Assets
  • Marubeni and ExxonMobil’s low-carbon ammonia deal marks major step in unleashing new energy supply

Archives

  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023

Categories

  • Industry News
  • Newsletter
  • Podcast
Scroll To Top
© Copyright 2024 Sunya Technologies Inc.