Waste Management Case Study for Energy Efficient Data Center Chiller Upgrade

Putting the "green" into Waste Management data center operations

​​​​​​​​​Data centers continue to evolve and become more efficient. The need for efficient HVAC is essential to ensure cost-effective, reliable operation given servers generate significant amounts of heat. As part of a facility upgrade, Waste Management, headquartered in Houston, Texas, replaced its chiller plants to serve its production data center facility in Austin, one of two data centers the Fortune 250 Company operates.

Over time, it became clear that the two original air-cooled chiller plants in the 2002-built facility needed replacement.

Waste Management predicts its annual savings on straight energy usage translates to approximately 11.3% or greater, along with a power factor correction savings, resulting in combined savings of more than 13.2% annually. "Our power factor was low at 0.75 and it has improved considerably to 0.88,"

“The main thing we noticed is deterioration in the cooling coils of the chillers. Overall, we required more efficiency from the chillers and the pumps,” says Brian Kirkpatrick, director of infrastructure operations at Waste Management.

Waste Management performed due diligence to examine HVAC solutions. To do this, they brought in Alcatex, Inc. of Dallas, a Data Center Design Build Specialist. The requirement called for a chiller replacement at N+N, also known as 2N redundancy, suitable to cover 10,250 ft2 of raised-floor data center operations, plus office space and a mechanical, electrical and plumbing (MEP) service room. Including the data center space, Waste Management’s operations span 40,385 ft2 within the 250,000 ft2 building.

Redundancy and Efficiency

Ultimately, it was determined that Waste Management’s requirement
for a high level of energy efficiency and reliability in a cost-effective
solution. Waste Management selected two Daikin 400-ton Pathfinder
air-cooled chillers with the highest efficiency available at the premium
level. In addition, the chiller plant includes variable frequency drives
(VFD) that add a high power-factor rating without the use of capacitors.

“This solution met our specification for a redundant solution at the
2N level. Additionally, we have four pumps with VFDs to bring 2N+1
redundancy,” says Vernon Williams, data center manager at Waste
Management.

“The Daikin name stands for itself in reliability and efficiency. It’s also
important for us as a company that products are manufactured in the
United States,” Kirkpatrick says, noting that once Waste Management
saw the estimates for the potential for energy savings and the
performance of similar chillers at the plant in Jersey City, it realized the
value it would receive for its investment. The project team’s discovery
also included visiting the factory in Staunton, Virginia to see the new
Pathfinder chillers in the test mode.

When Waste Management was choosing a manufacturer and supplier for
their chiller replacement project, Kirkpatrick relied heavily on his current
partner; Alcatex. Alcatex was already familiar with Daikin Applied and
its Service Group. Alcatex, along with Daikin, has supported the data
center specialist’s managed maintenance service contract with Waste
Management at the both the Austin and Houston facilities since 2012
for maintenance of the old chillers, existing computer room air handlers
(CRAH) and other HVAC-related equipment. “No other manufacturer
could build the chillers as efficiently, “says Kirkpatrick

Planning, communication key

Replacement of such large chiller units requires heavy lifting — each
Pathfinder weighs approximately 12 tons — and significant planning
to keep the data center fully operational. “The level of risk to keep
our production data center operational during the chiller plant
replacement process meant contingency planning.” Gautam Roy, VP of IT demanded.

​During the hot Texas heat in summer 2014, installation of the chillers
was phased to maintain complete functionality of the data center.
Installation took place within two few-hour segments over weekends in
June and July 2014. Pre-connections were made in advance so the
actual hook-up of each chiller took hours. “During each installation, we
made system pump replacements, adding new pumps with VFD drives
as well.” Additional plumbing and electrical work was completed within
a few days following each chiller installation.

The chiller plants were lifted in and out by crane from the walled
service yard which is dedicated to Waste Management’s operations at
the building. Overhead piping and other space constraints meant the
first replacement to remove the old chiller and install the new units
required that a segment of the concrete wall be cut out temporarily.
“One of the existing chillers was kept running while we made the
first replacement in addition to the installation of a temporary rental
chiller,” Williams explains.

A temporary rental 300-ton chiller which was used as a reserve chiller
during the decommissioning of the first existing chiller. “Should
something have happened during the replacement, we had the
temporary chiller trailer-mounted with dual pumps available on site as
a redundant system to bring back operations as quickly as possible,”
Williams says.

Redundant chilled water piping to the data room floor was also made
in June. “If a loop failure in the supply pipe were to occur, there was
no way to restore cooling so we added a secondary feed, a B loop
in the data floor, which was requested by Waste Management for
redundancy,” Morgenroth says.

Each chiller replacement was a success. “The level of redundancy we
had available during the change-out and the level of collaboration
among all parties was remarkable. We didn’t lose a single minute of
downtime,” Kirkpatrick says.

In addition, throughout the life of the Pathfinder chillers, Rapid
Restore® technology and a fast loading option ensures uptime. “In
the remote chance there is a power outage that’s not handled by the
back-up power supply, RapidRestore brings back the chiller to full
performance within three to five minutes,” Kirkpatrick says.

The tech refresh at the Austin data center also encompassed a major
upgrade to the building automation system (BAS). “A number of
control systems by different manufacturers were integrated into the
existing infrastructure. We replaced the former chiller controls to
the ASHRAE-standard BACnet® controllers on the Daikin Applied
chillers.” Says Kirkpatrik.

Kirkpatrick says upfront planning among all parties and pre-wiring prior
to the first change-out of the old chiller before the first chiller went
online kept the data center operational during the replacement process.

“We used the Tridium Niagara Framework as the software platform
for integrating a number of systems on new Distech front-end BAS
controls,” Williams says, noting the chillers are controlled through the
new BAS as well as access via wall-mounted master control panels.

The data center’s existing Eaton Foreseer software that allows Waste
Management to monitor its power and energy usage remains in
place. Additionally, new CRAH units by Liebert also incorporate the
manufacturer’s Site Scan web centralized monitoring and control system.

Savings to bank on

Since the chiller replacement was completed in July and the pumps in
August 2014, the energy savings have been dramatic. “We’re seeing
about a 100 kWh drop in monthly power utilization which is about a
10 percent reduction in our usage overall at the facility, attributable to
the new chillers, pumps and CRAH units when compared to the former
chillers,” Williams says.

Waste Management predicts its annual savings on straight energy
usage translates to approximately 11.3% or greater, along with a
power factor correction savings, resulting in combined savings of more
than 13.2% annually. “Our power factor was low at 0.75 and it has
improved considerably to 0.88,” Williams says.

Williams says the chiller plants at the Austin data center have also
contributed to the facility’s improvement of its Power Utilization
Effectiveness (PUE) rate which is currently 1.54.

“The Daikin Applied VFD technology takes a lot of strain off the grid
infrastructure at the Waste Management data center,” concludes
Kirkpatrick of WM. “We plan to apply more of their technology across
the nation. I can’t wait to see more of these online.”

The Building Team
Director of Infrastructure: Brian Kirkpatrick
Facility Manager Houston: Vernon Williams
Facility Manager Austin: Robert Holmes
Project Manager: Carlton GriffisAlcatex, Inc.
Daikin Applied Service Sales Rep: Kenneth Morgenroth

About Waste Management

Waste Management owns and operates sixteen waste-to-energy facilities and five independent power-production facilities, which specialize in collecting municipal solid waste and transforming it into renewable electric power.


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