DHS data center to forge into new frontier
DHS plans to select a vendor this summer to build a second cross-agency data center, and has directed prospective contractors to propose locations in the Western U.S. to help shield the facility from any major East Coast blackout.
The Homeland Security Department plans to select a vendor this summer to build a second cross-agency data center, and has directed prospective contractors to propose locations in the Western United States to help shield the facility from any major East Coast electricity blackout.
According to department procurement documents and industry sources, the department is in a down-selection phase to pick the contractor for the planned data center. The department likely will announce a task order award for the second data center this summer, according to Input of Reston, Va.
DHS is managing the acquisition under the Enterprise Acquisition Gateway for Leading Edge solutions umbrella contracts. The department kicked off the acquisition last July with a request for information from vendors.
DHS already has one cross-agency data center, operated at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi in cooperation with the Naval Oceanographic Office.
The second data center will use "active-active" or mirroring technology to continuously synchronize with the Stennis center. That technology would allow the second center to take over from the Mississippi facility immediately in the event of a complete power failure or other disaster.
The Stennis data center draws its power from utilities in the power pool run by SERC Reliability Corp., formerly known as the Southeastern Electric Reliability Council. SERC includes power generators, transmission providers and related entities in the Southeast that in turn link to the Eastern Interconnect, a group of eight regional reliability areas or power pools that exchange electricity for economic, pollution control and reliability purposes.
In response to brownouts and regional electricity failures in the past, as well as concerns about shortages of power transmission and generation capacity, Congress and the National Electrical Reliability Council have progressively worked to minimize the risks of wide-scale blackouts. NERC builds standards and helps define the power pool regions.
But some regional power failures in the past demonstrated that an equipment failure at even a single critical point in the electricity network can cascade in a fashion that cuts off service across areas where tens of millions of people live. Brownouts caused by circumstances such as unusually hot summer weather or even, as in the case of the Enron Corp., electricity market manipulations, can also degrade service to a degree that menaces data centers.
Accordingly, DHS seeks to protect its planned new data center from the possibility that a power failure could affect all of the Eastern Interconnect by choosing a site for its second data center in either of the two remaining interconnects:
- ERCOT, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas or the Texas Interconnect
- WSSC the Western Systems Coordinating Council or the Western Interconnect
Wilson P. Dizard III writes for Government Computer Newsan 1105 Government Information Group publication
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