Pictured: The GOS (Groupement Orange Services) data center in west Africa
French telecoms carrier Orange is implementing the latest innovations in solar power at its largest data center in Africa, significantly reducing carbon emissions.
The GOS (Groupement Orange Services) is the company’s main data facility in Africa, providing compute power for 18 Middle Eastern and African subsidiary operations and enabling pooled hosting, infrastructure operation services and service platforms. The data center was built in 2016 in Grand Bassam in Côte d’Ivoire on a site covering 16,600 square metres to host IT and telecommunication equipment.
It is one of the main components of the Orange data center network in Africa, helping to advance digital equality by supporting countries in developing agricultural, educational, and healthcare services and fostering entrepreneurship and local innovation.
Orange and French energy company Engie are joining forces to convert the GOS to solar power by installing a solar plant on rooftops and solar carports for a total installed capacity of 355 kWp, reducing its environmental footprint and minimizing the share of commercial electricity from non-renewable sources. The work is scheduled for the second half of 2022.
This plant will be made up of 784 latest-generation photovoltaic cells and will provide the data center with an estimated 527 MWh/year of renewable energy, enough for around 60% of the data center’s daytime consumption.
“This project is a first in West Africa for Orange in terms of its size and scope and it illustrates our ambition to speed up our solar projects in order to achieve net zero carbon by 2040,” said Alioune Ndiaye, Chairman and CEO of Orange Middle East and Africa. “In the rest of Africa and the Middle East we have already implemented several initiatives, such as equipping 5,400 telecoms sites with solar panels and building solar farms in Jordan and Mali. We intend to go further.”
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