Central Texas computer giant goes green

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Round Rock-based Dell announced Wednesday it will use green energy to power its entire Austin headquarters.

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Project Green

The computer company said it gets 40 percent of its power from Waste Management’s Austin Community Landfill gas-to-energy plant. The rest comes from wind farms.

The company declined to say how much it will pay for the renewable power.

The contract is for 80 million kilowatt hours a year. Typically renewable power credits cost around half a cent per kilowatt hour, meaning Dell could pay about $400,000 extra to run on renewable power rather than fossil fuel or nuclear power.

More than 10,000 employees work at the 2.1 million square-foot Dell headquarters.

“It’s time for our industry to take a lead role in creating a clean energy future,” said Paul Bell, president of Dell Americas in a media release.

A facility in Twin Falls, Idaho is also completely green-powered.

Dell also said it will increase green power from eight to 17 percent at the Austin Parmer Campus. Previously, 8 percent of the campus’ power came from renewable sources.

The company said it is the latest step in meeting a 2008 carbon neutral commitment made last year.

Dell expects the renewable power to become cheaper than fossil fuel electricity during the next three years, saving the company almost $2 million per year and cutting carbon dioxide emissions by almost 12,000 tons.

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The Dallas Morning News contributed to this report

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