If
Mother Nature has anything to say, there simply are some places where
you shouldn’t place a data center. Do you really want to have your
servers where there is a high risk of earthquakes, tornadoes or
hurricanes? We didn’t think so…
It seems that the U.S. is “blessed” not only with large areas where
the likelihood of earthquakes is very high, but also with some very
harsh weather conditions in the form of hurricanes (no one is going to
forget Katrina) and tornadoes, the most violent weather phenomenon in
nature. Power outages, breakdown of infrastructure and loss of lives
follow in the tracks of these hazardous monstrosities of nature.
We decided to look at heat maps for earthquakes, hurricanes and
tornadoes in the U.S. to see exactly where the danger areas were
located. In addition to that we also composited them to see get the
full picture.
States with large areas where there is either a very high risk of
hurricanes, tornadoes or earthquakes are California, Florida,
Washington, Arkansas, Texas, Colorado, Nebraska, South Carolina,
Louisiana, Arizona, New Mexico.
If your biggest worry is weather, Florida has a very high risk of
both hurricanes and tornadoes. If your biggest worry is earthquakes,
California has been waiting for The Big One for quite some time now (hopefully not this bad, though). Silicon Valley is resting on wobbly ground.
There are a few areas in Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Michigan and Texas where none of the three heat maps
overlap. There may of course be other dangers aside from those we
listed here.
We are not saying that everyone should move to Montana, but if you
take earthquakes, hurricanes and tornadoes into account, you might want
to keep your data center (or servers in general) outside the “red
zones” of the map.
Be the first to rate this post
- Currently 0/5 Stars.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5