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The world's first prefabricated computing power center base began operations in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, on June 6, offering a more efficient and low-carbon model for computing infrastructure construction. Acting as the energy hub and "heart" of a computing center, the base can cut construction time by nearly 70% compared with traditional methods while reducing land use by over 30% and overall costs by 20%. It also supports direct access to green electricity, achieving 100% green power consumption and helping lower electricity costs by around 30% per token. The Qingdao facility has been connected to an enterprise-owned data center and is expected to be rolled out in national-level data center clusters and regional computing hubs later this year.
The world's first prefabricated computing power center base began operations in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, on June 6, offering a more efficient and low-carbon model for computing infrastructure construction. Acting as the energy hub and "heart" of a computing center, the base can cut construction time by nearly 70% compared with traditional methods while reducing land use by over 30% and overall costs by 20%. It also supports direct access to green electricity, achieving 100% green power consumption and helping lower electricity costs by around 30% per token. The Qingdao facility has been connected to an enterprise-owned data center and is expected to be rolled out in national-level data center clusters and regional computing hubs later this year.