Professional Documents
Culture Documents
in Hong Kong
Report prepared by:
Table of Contents
Executive Summary ........................................................................................................ iii
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ii
Executive Summary
Contrary to the general conception of declining importance of worlds usage of lead in the lead acid
battery, statistics compiled by International Lead and Zinc Group (ILZG) show that the consumption of
lead (predominantly in lead acid battery) has doubled from 4.5 million ton in 2004 to an annualized 11
million tons in 2014. (ILZG is one of the oldest intergovernmental commodity organization formed by
United Nation.)1
Environmentally friendly lead waste recycling has never been more critical as lead acid battery demand
is increasing exponentially in transport and IT sectors, so the periodic disposal of the lead waste is
becoming more ubiquitous than ever in our society.
The basic components of a lead acid battery have not changed since its invention: lead, acid and
plastic casing. However if they are disposed improperly, the catastrophic consequence on the
environment is irreversible. In most countries, nowadays, formal recycling process has become an
indispensable integral of a societys infrastructure in treating its chemical waste.
The goal of this study is an attempt to assess the full extent of the lead waste issue in Hong Kong SAR
by focusing on the identification of generating sources and corresponding estimates of quantity of leadacid batteries.
The potential of replacement ULAB for recycling in Hong Kong in year 2020 is 13,073 tons for
Transportation, 216 tons, for buildings and tunnels, and 49,507 tons for Data Centers respectively,
totaling 62,796 tons per annum by 2020.
Application
SLI
Buildings, Road and
Railway Tunnels
Data Centers
Total
62,796
Replacement ULAB Projection for Year 2020
http://www.ilzsg.org/static/home.aspx
iii
Why Recycle?
1. The recycling process is an essential element in sustainable development and provides rational
uses for scarce, natural resources such as lead. There are strong advantages in the recycling
process:
(a) extension of natural resources lifetime although there are undiscovered ore deposits
all over the world, they are ultimately finite and this limit is linked to its usage rate.
Therefore, recycling processes extend the lifetime of these deposits;
(b) reduced monetary costs secondary materials provide means of monetary economy by:
(1) being cheaper processes than primary minerals recovery;
(2) reducing the dependence on imported materials;
(3) reducing the investment cost of equipment; and
(4) reducing waste production, especially the primary extraction waste;
(c) energy conservation since few metals occur in nature as readily usable forms, the
recycling processes allow the production of metals with about 25% or less2 of the energy
used in intensive procedures which usually depend on fossil fuels, as in furnaces for
example, the recycling processes provide a means of pollution reduction.
2. Besides these aspects which are applied for all metal recycling processes, lead itself has some
other important factors that make its recycling even more environmentally sound:
(1) Toxicity toward the environment and human health Toxicity exposure to
human, animals, vegetation and environment through soil contamination, streams
and drainage systems are well known to be devastating with long lasting effects.
Thus, it is reasonable to think that lack of a lead recycling system would increase
dramatically the risk of exposure since the lead waste would have to have
environmentally unsound destinations;
(2) Large recyclability the fact that lead has a low melting point and it is easily
refined from scrap increases its recyclability, i.e. the relatively technical ease or
feasibility of lead isolation from scrap and reintroduction into the raw material
stream;
(3) Large market lead enjoys a large market and, depending on the country, a
reasonably well-organized collection system of up to 96% from one predominant
product which has a short and predictable lifetime: the starting, lighting and ignition
(SLI) battery.
3. From the above, it becomes clear that destinations such as landfilling, incineration and others
cannot be considered as an environmentally sound management of wastes, not only for
economic reasons but also for health and environmental reasons.
4. Once this is recognized, recycling processes become a technologically viable answer to the
problem since, when properly applied and controlled, recycling can prove an economically
viable and environmentally sound solution. Therefore, lead recycling should be pursued as an
optimal solution to the environmentally sound management of waste lead-acid batteries3.
Basel Convention, Technical Guidelines for the Environmentally Sound Management of Waste Lead Acid Batteries,
2003
4
http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_pdf.nsf/6799165D2FEE3FA94825755E0033E532/897C4EC786B2EA10482575EE006F1
BEA/$FILE/CAP_354C_e_b5.pdf
The steps to be taken by a chemical waste producer are set out below:
1. Record on a trip ticket and its copies all the necessary particulars and information
required.
2. Ensure that the waste to be delivered is correctly classified, described, quantified and
labelled.
3. Certify on the trip ticket that all the information provided by him is correct.5
4. Retain a copy of the trip ticket for at least 12 months following consignment of the
waste.
A waste collector should deliver
collected wastes to a reception point
within 48 hours of collection. Any
subsequent transfer of waste from a
reception point would also need to
follow the same trip-ticket
requirements.
Waste producers, waste collectors
and reception point managers are
obliged to provide EPD with any
extra information requested within a
specified time.6
http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_pdf.nsf/6799165D2FEE3FA94825755E0033E532/897C4EC786B2EA1048
2575EE006F1BEA/$FILE/CAP_354C_e_b5.pdf
6
http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_pdf.nsf/6799165D2FEE3FA94825755E0033E532/897C4EC786B2EA1048
2575EE006F1BEA/$FILE/CAP_354C_e_b5.pdf
Penalties
A summary of the key offences and their maximum penalties related to the duties of chemical waste
producers is show below Section of the
Regulation
Offence
7
8
9 to 11
13 to 15
12, 18
21
Maximum Penalty
$200,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
$10,000
$200,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
$100,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
$100,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
$50,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
$200,000 plus 6 months
imprisonment
The Generating Sources and Estimated Quantities of Used Lead Acid Batteries in Hong
Kong
The quantity of ULAB used for Starting/Lighting/Ignition (SLI) in Hong Kong is estimated based on the
following sources:
http://www.basel.int/Portals/4/Basel%20Convention/docs/text/BaselConventionText-e.pdf
http://dunwellgroupblog.blogspot.hk/2013/06/cradle-to-grave-tip-ticket-chemical.html
1.
Starting/Lighting/Ignition (SLI)
Starting/Lighting/Ignition (SLI) batteries from 699,540 licensed vehicles (at 31 December 2014)9
are usually collected at 1,000 registered garages in the SAR. There were a total of 134,180
licensed diesel commercial vehicles. They include light, medium and heavy goods vehicles, public
and private light buses, non-franchised and franchised buses.
Franchise, Non-franchise and Private Buses and Mini Buses There are 12,843 Double and
Single deck buses in Hong Kong managed by 6 major operators and 582 private buses for a total
of 13,425 buses. With a reference battery10 of 12V, 95Ah, 35 kg, two batteries per vehicle. The
estimated number of batteries is 26,850 (939 tonnes).
There are a total of 7,340 registered Red, Green and Private Mini Buses operating in Hong Kong.
With a reference battery11 of 12V, 95Ah, 20 kg, two batteries per vehicle. The estimated number
of batteries is 14,680 (294 tonnes).
Light, Medium and Heavy Goods Vehicles12 - There are 71,712 Light Goods Vehicles Licenced
by the Transport Department. With a reference battery13 of 12V, 60Ah, 12 kg, two batteries per
vehicle. The estimated number of batteries is 143,424 (1,721 tonnes).
There are 36,630 Medium Goods Vehicles Licenced by the Transport Department. With a
reference battery14 of 12V, 95Ah, 35 kg, two batteries per vehicle. The estimated number of
batteries is 73,260 (2,564 tonnes).
There are 5,073 Heavy Goods Vehicles Licenced by the Transport Department. With a reference
battery15 of 12V, 95Ah, 35 kg, two batteries per vehicle. The estimated number of batteries is
10,146 (355 tonnes).
http://www.td.gov.hk/filemanager/en/content_281/table41a.pdf
10
http://www.td.gov.hk/filemanager/en/content_281/table41a.pdf
13
Motorcycles There are a total of 45,199 motorcycles (including 762 Government motorcycles)
licenced by the Transport Department, with a reference battery16 of 12V, 95Ah, 3.2 kg. The
estimated number of batteries is 45,199 (145 tonnes).
Taxis There are a total of 18,066 of red, green, and blue licensed taxis operating in Hong Kong,
with a reference battery17 of 12V, 60Ah,14 kg. The estimated number of batteries is 18,066 (253
tonnes).
Private Transport - There are 495,038 licensed private cars and 1,530 special purpose vehicles
totalling 496,568 accounting for 70 per cent of all vehicles, with a reference battery18 of 12V, 60Ah,
14 kg. The estimated number of batteries is 496,568 (6,952 tonnes).
Government Vehicles - There are 5,527 government vehicles reported by the Transport
Department as of October 2014, with a reference battery19 of 12V, 60Ah, 14 kg. The estimated
number of batteries is 5,527 (77 tonnes).
Number and Gross Tonnage of Ships Registered in Hong Kong According to the Hong
Kong Marine Department, there are 2,165 number of Ocean-going ships (92,657,572 Gross
tonnage); 77 River Trade ships (46,781 Gross tonnage) and 158 Local Services Ships (78,009
Gross tonnage) registered at December, 2014. Estimate for the weight of batteries per vessel (kg)
totals 1,397 tonnes for this study are based on the following:
15
Weight of
vessel (kg)
6x 56kg
4x 45kg
2x 56kg
2x 45kg
batteries
Replacement Period
(year)
5
2
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.3
5
949
3569
195
111
95
Total
11,438
The Averaged Annual ULAB from the SLI section is estimated at 12,885 tonnes.
Therefore, based on the number of registered vehicles from the Transport Department and Marine
Department, and number of commercial and industrial buildings, we estimate the total number of
ULAB from all the categories to be 11,438 tonnes as of 31 December 2014.
20
http://www.legco.gov.hk/yr09-10/english/hc/sub_leg/sc05/papers/sc050209cb1-1163-1-e.pdf
Battery Life
Battery life is defined as the period of time in which a battery is capable of being recharged and
retains the charge applied. Once the battery is no longer capable of being recharged or cannot
retain its charge properly, its lifetime reaches its end and it becomes a used battery for the
application it was designed for. The main cause of this death is the sulfatation process. This
begins when lead sulfate (PbSO4) precipitates over the battery plates eventually reaching a point
where the ions can no longer migrate from or to the plates or electrolyte due to lead sulfate
coating, and the reactions which produce the electric energy cease. Most batteries are designed
for 500 charging cycles which if use daily, it is about 1.3 years.
Under ideal conditions, an automobile battery can last up to six years, but several factors
contribute to decrease this optimal lifetime:
a)
incomplete charging process;
b)
battery remains too long without use or stands a long time between two charges;
c)
hot weather: it increases the sulfatation process rate;
d)
deep discharging process, the deeper the discharge the less life time the battery will
have;
e)
low electrolyte level: air exposed plates becomes sulfated immediately.
When all this factors are considered together, the battery life span ranges from 6 to 48 months,
yet only 30% of all batteries actually reach the 48-month mark.
At the end of its life the battery is classified as a hazardous waste under the Basel Convention
and should be handled accordingly in order to prevent damage to human health or to the
environment.
The projection of SLI to the year 2020 is carried out, as the building sectors and marine sectors
are not expected to have great changes, we project the growth based on the Licensed Vehicles
growth only, as follows:
2009
584,070
Estimated Tonnage of
Replacement Used Lead Acid
Batteries (tonnes)
8,444
2010
607,796
8,754
2011
630,281
9,093
2012
653,010
9,452
2013
680,914
9,760
2014
699,540
11,438
7*
2015
728,221
11,684
8*
2016
758,078
11,940
9*
2017
789,160
12,206
10*
2018
821,516
12,484
11*
2019
855,198
12,772
12*
2020
890,261
13,073
Year
2.
Uninterrupted Power Supply (UPS) for Emergency Lighting and Fire Alarm
Systems
Uninterrupted Power Supply (UPS) batteries for emergency lighting and fire alarm systems are
mandated in all public and non-domestic area.
Office Buildings - The total stock of private office at the end of 2013 amounted to 10 983 200
m, which included 63% Grade A, 23% Grade B and 14% Grade C office. Office space in the
core districts comprising Sheung Wan, Central, Wan Chai, Causeway Bay and Tsim Sha Tsui
accounted for 57% of the total stock at the end of 201321.
For estimation of ULAB, there is an emergency lighting unit assigned to every 60 m, for an
estimate of 183,053 batteries installed in these buildings.
21
10
Private Commercial Buildings - This sector comprises retail premises and other premises
designed or adapted for commercial use, with the exception of purpose-built offices. Stock in
this sector at the end of 2013 was 10 882 700 m, with 30% of the total space on Hong Kong
Island, 40% in Kowloon and 30% in the New Territories. For estimation of ULAB, there is an
emergency lighting unit assigned to every 60 m, for an estimate of 181,378 batteries installed
in these buildings.
Private Flatted Factories, Private Industrial Office, Private Specialized Factories and
Private Storage Buildings - This category comprises flatted factories and ancillary office
accommodation. At the end of 2013, stock in this sector was 17 160 200 m, which was evenly
distributed between the urban areas and the New Territories. For estimation of ULAB, there is
an emergency lighting unit assigned to every 230 m, for an estimate of 74,610 batteries
installed in these buildings.
There was 593,000 m of Private Industrial Office categorised by the Rating and Valuation
Department of the Hong Kong Government at the end of 2013. For estimation of ULAB, there is
an emergency lighting unit assigned to every 230 m, for an estimate of 2,578 batteries installed in
these buildings.
There was 2 996 600 m at the end of Private Specialised Factories categorised by the Rating and
Valuation Department of the Hong Kong Government by the end of 2013. This category
comprises all other factory premises, primarily purpose-built for specialised manufacturing
processes, and usually for occupation by a single operator. For estimation of ULAB, there is an
emergency lighting unit assigned to every 230 m, for an estimate of 13,029 batteries installed in
these buildings.
There was 3 561 700 m of Private Storage at the end of 2013. This category comprises premises
designed or adapted for use as godowns, or cold stores, and includes ancillary offices. Premises
located within container terminals are included. For estimation of ULAB, there is an emergency
lighting unit assigned to every 230 m, for an estimate of 15,486 batteries installed in these
buildings.
Private Developments - UPS batteries for Emergency Lighting Requirement from private
developments22. This sector comprises independent domestic units with an exclusive cooking
area, bathroom and toilet, but does not include village houses, quarters held by the People's
Liberation Army, quarters attached to premises of utility companies, dormitories (including
student dormitories in educational institutes), quarters held by the Hospital Authority, hotels and
22
11
hostels. At the end of 2013, the overall stock was 1 123 600 units. (approximately 60-70 million
m)
Small/Medium domestic units - This sub-sector comprises units with a saleable area
of less than 100 m. Stock at the end of 2013 was 1 037 200 units which accounted for
92% of the total private domestic stock. Under the Code of Practice issued by the Fire
Department23, all high-rise buildings in Hong Kong have to be designed with protected
escape route with emergency lighting provisions. High-rise buildings are defined in local
regulations as:
A building of which the floor of the uppermost storey exceeds 30 m above the point of
staircase discharge at ground floor level24.
For estimation of UPS, we assume two emergency lighting units assigned to every 8
units for an estimate of 259,300 batteries installed in these buildings.
Large domestic units - This sub-sector comprises units with a saleable area of 100 m
or above. Stock at the end of 2013 was 86,400 units, representing 8% of the total
private domestic stock.
For an estimation of UPS, there are two emergency lighting units assigned to every 4
units for an estimate of 43,200 batteries in these buildings.
Therefore, the estimated UPS in the domestic buildings, offices, commercial buildings
and private industrial buildings in Hong Kong is approximately 772,634 batteries, with a
reference battery25 of 6V, 4.5Ah, 0.82 kg.
23
Codes of Practice for Minimum Fire Service Installations and Equipment and Inspection and Testing of
Installations and Equipment, Fire Services Department, Hong Kong (1998).
25
12
Year
1
2
3
2009
2010
2011
105,443,400
105,576,900
105,481,600
634
662
692
4
5
6
7
2012
2013
2014
2015
105,927,800
106,177,400
106,326,000
106,474,900
723
756
790
825
8
9
10
11
2016
2017
2018
2019
106,624,000
106,773,200
106,922,700
107,072,400
862
901
942
984
12
2020
107,222,300
1028
26
27
13
3.
28
29
http://datacentre,gov.hk/en/availablelands_ib.html
30
Data Centre Facilitation Unit, Office of the Government Chief Information Officer The Government of
the Hong Kong SAR; Email: datacentre@ogcio.gov.hk; Tel: (852) 2582 4574
14
According to 2009 Hong Kong Government survey, the total floor area of data centers in Hong
Kong was 2.3 million square feet. At the time, the estimated number of data center operators in
Hong Kong was about 53.
In 2012, Colliers International published a booklet31, in which they estimated the growth of data
centers in Hong Kong will reach 4.1 million square feet (380,902 m) by 2015. However, at the
time of preparing this report in December, 2014, our survey indicates the total floor area of data
centers from services providers in Hong Kong has already reached 7.3 million square feet
(729,666 m).
This is in line with the vision set out in its Digital 21 Strategy32 in developing Hong Kong into a hub
for technological cooperation and trade.
In House Data Centers
However, the surveyed area of 7.3 million square feet does not include the in-house Data Centers
within small and medium private enterprises (SME) and major institutions and sectors such as the
Airport Authority, MTRC, Broadcasting, Energy and Utilities etc. According to the Digital Realtys Survey
of 2012, about 22% of Hong Kong companies have their own data facilities and would expand
themselves in 2012-2013. Based on this we can say the in-house data center in Hong Kong is at least
22%. As the survey did not included education establishments, we would estimate the overall is slightly
higher at 25%.33
Therefore, we estimate the total data center floor area in Hong Kong for 2014 to be 10 million square
feet (972,888 m2) and growing at a steady rate of 7% p.a.
31
32
33
15
The following is the technical determination of the total power consumption and back up UPS of data
centers, based on the starting floor area of Data Center of 10 million square feet.
Internet Users in Hong Kong
In December 2014, at the time of preparing this report, the internet users in Hong Kong reached 5.8
million. This represents 79% penetration of the population34. BroadGroup estimates that around 8590% of Asian data center space is in-house (owned by corporates, government, SMEs), and this varies
from around 75% in Singapore to 9.1% in Indonesia35. It shows Hong Kong leads in internet penetration
in S.E Asian countries.
UPS Batteries for Data Centre Facilitation Unit
Below are the four specific tiers of datacenters:
34
Tier 1 99.671% uptime: Tier 1 providers do not pay IP transit, meaning they have a global
presence and don't pay other providers for any portion of their connectivity. These datacenters
are basic computer rooms that require a full shutdown for preventative maintenance. Annual
downtime is 28.8 hours.
Tier 2 99.741% uptime: Tier 2 networks have a national or international footprint, but still
pay IP transit to reach some portions of the Internet. These facilities have some redundancy
but still have a single path for power, requiring a shutdown for preventative maintenance.
Annual downtime is 22 hours.
Tier 3 99.982% uptime: Tier 3 networks are regional providers. Larger datacenters are
typically tier 3 networks and build redundancy through redundant POPs (points of presence)
outside of their facilities. Past the POPs, these providers pay for IP transit. These datacenters
have sufficient redundancy in place to allow for planned maintenance without downtime (N+1
redundancy.) Tier 3 datacenters are required to have at least 13.2 KV (kilo volts) of power.
Annual downtime is 1.6 hours.
Tier 4 99.995% uptime: Most data centers are tier 4 networks. They have their own
internal network but they pay other networks for IP transit outside of the facility. Tier 4 DCs are
the top tier. They are built with multiple paths to power and AC and are designed to cope with a
35
Source:
https://www.bicsi.org/uploadedFiles/BICSI_Website/Global_Community/Presentations_and_Photos/S
outheast_Asia/2012_SEA/2.1%20ASEAN%20Data%20Centre%20Market.pdf
16
worst-case scenario with no critical impact. These datacenters are required to have at least
26.2 KV of power.36 Annual downtime is 0.4 hours.
17
In the past, many data centers were designed with reference to the Design Guideline with a provision of
electrical power between 50W to 100W per square foot. From 2009 to 2015 there is an annual growth
rate of 9.8 per cent in data centers, in particular, with popularity and data volume, the exponential
increase of smart phone data processing that is not considered as HD high density processing. In Hong
Kong, the industry observed an 18 percent growth in 2011 alone. According to the power equipment
suppliers, the current design provision of UPS for data centers is 150W per square foot, which has
been accepted as todays standard. However, the industry is growing at a very rapid speed and the
processing power and technology in servers have been increased at a breakneck rate. In a number of
international surveys, the power density of data centers around the world is most likely going in the
direction of 36kW/rack.
Beyond Silicon: the processors of the future
In 2007, Spiros Liolis, a forward thinker in Cloud Computing Initiatives and Converged DC Lead at HP
EMEA, projected that the power consumption in all data centers be would increasing to 4000-12000
w/m and 32kW per rack by 2015, with more heat to be absorbed by CRACs37. This is because the
CPU power has continued to rise in an amazing speed. Currently, the multicores CPU processing
37
18
power spills trillions of data quantity in TB per seconds, and these data signals need to be physically
converted in SDD chipsets and hard discs.
What might replace silicon chips when the technology reaches its limits? We investigate the options.
The worlds first microprocessor, the Intel 4004, was launched in 1971. It was a 4-bit design with a clock
speed of 740kHz, and contained a single core. Today we have 64-bit chips, clock speeds of 4.4GHz,
and up to a dozen cores. This phenomenal rate of change would be awe-inspiring had we not come to
expect constant improvements as the norm in the world of computing38.
It does not matter whether we move ahead to an Optical CPU or the outrageous DNA CPU in the future.
The data spilling out from this equipment still needs power for storage and retrievals. As long as the
scale of data bank is increasing with the CPU processing power, the storage and back-up system will
stay within the market in an upward trend. If we look at the slope of the Transistors Count in a CPU as
shown in the graph, we can see the trend for required power and UPS for data centers growth in the
near future on same slope.
Figure 6. Microprocessor count, the trend of data processing technology between 1971 2011.
38
19
In 2014, new online data centers such as NTT Data Centre in Tseung Kwang O are offering
15kW/rack power density to users39. In this report, it is strategically necessary to know what is
coming in the near future in this industry. An industry-wide initiative, spearheaded by Emerson
Network Power, to create a visionor multiple visionsof the future of the data centre. As part of
Data Center 2025, Emerson conducted interviews with key industry influencers, solicited feedback
from the industry at the Data Center 2025 online portal:
EmersonNetworkPower.com/DataCenter2025, and conducted an online survey that generated
more than 800 responses40. The online survey was conducted among data center and
telecommunications professionals in the U.S., Latin America, Western Europe and Asia Pacific.
The survey included open-ended questions to collect unbiased expectations about the future of
the data center along with close-ended questions to collect quantifiable expectations about
changes in technology, business needs, ownership and required skills related to data centers.
Their survey indicated most people believe the power density in data centers will continue to rise
to 53kW per rack by the year 2025.
39
Source: http://www.ntt.com/aboutus_e/news/data/20101007.html
40
20
email, interviews and videos. The results of the initiative are detailed in a report, Data Center
2025: Exploring the Possibilities41.
Year
Fairly Likely
Most
Likely
Less Likely
2014
15.00
15
15
2015
21.00
19
16
2016
27.00
22
16
2017
33.00
26
17
2018
38.50
29
17
2019
44.50
33
17
2020
50.00
36
18
2021
56.00
39
18
2022
62.00
43
19
2023
68.00
46
19
2024
73.50
49
20
2025
80.00
53
20
Figure 8. Projected Global Power Density Trend in Data Centers 2014 2025
To ensure sufficient protection and account for growth, it is recommended to use a UPS that has a
VA capacity rating that is greater than the total power needed for the protected equipment, by at
least 15%. To account for the growth of existing data centers, we will need a UPS with greater VA
capacity than the total VA requirement. Most UPS data center planners recommend assuming at
least 15% growth over a five year period, though some actual plans for growth may require a
larger allowance. With a typical UPS battery module, the electrical capacity of the referenced
41
Source: http://www.emersonnetworkpower.com/en-US/Latest-Thinking/Data-Center2025/Pages/default.aspx
21
product is 57.6 Ah, 12 V, 23.05 kg. With a 30 minute provision, the estimated total number of
ULAB for Data Centres in Hong Kong for 2014 is 34,638 tonnes. Generally, data centres replace
their servers every 3 to 4 years. Therefore, we have estimated the replacement ULAB quantity
based on 3.5 year replacement. However, we have estimated the Data Centre growth rate in
Hong Kong at 7% year-on-year up to 2020 only, lower than the estimated 8.9% in the Region, as
there are limited land and facilities in Hong Kong42.
China now accounts for 30% of data centre white space in the Asia Pacific region (excluding
Japan), according to the latest research from DatacenterDynamics Intelligence (DCDi). The report,
Asia Pacific Key Trends received responses from 521 organizations across the region, which
were then used to collect key data on data centre growth, trends in space, power, investment and
new technologies. More than 70% of these respondents were working in a senior management
position.
In total, Census respondents for APAC represented 5,090,000 m of white space - a figure which
in itself grew by 7% in 2013.
It found China has continued to show the highest rate of growth in terms of white space in the
region at 24% in 2014, however, the rate of growth overall across the region has slowed in
comparison to the previous year.43
42
Source: Grand View Research, Data Center UPS Market Analysis By Product (Small Data Centers,
Medium Data Centers, Large Data Centers) And Segment Forecasts To 2020
43
Source: http://www.datacenterdynamics.com/focus/archive/2013/12/china-leads-asia-pacific-datacenter-growth
22
Year
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
UPS provisions
(MW)
973
1041
1114
1192
1275
1365
1460
15
21
27
33
39
45
50
1571
2353
3237
4233
5285
6536
7858
Figure 9. Estimated data centre floor space growth in Hong Kong 2014 2020.
Year
2014
2015
34,638
51,888
9,897
14,825
2016
2017
2018
2019
71,383
93,354
116,536
144,127
20,395
26,672
33,296
41,179
2020
173,276
49,507
Figure 10. Estimated quantity of UPS Lead Acid Batteries in Data Centers in Hong Kong 2014 2020.
AEC Limited, December, 2014 Report
Lead Acid Battery Consumption in Hong Kong
23
Conclusion
Based on the existing/available information, we have estimated the number of Lead Acid Battery
installations in Hong Kong in the year 2020 from Transportation, Buildings and Tunnels, and Data
Centers would be 33,852 tons, 1,079 tons and, 173,276 tons respectively. Total Lead Acid Battery
installations would be 208,207 tons with the reference replacement periods at 2 years for
Transportation, 10 years for Buildings and Tunnels, and 3.5 years for Data Centers. The potential of
replacement ULAB for recycling in Hong Kong in year 2020 is 16,926 tons, 216 tons, 49,507 tons
respectively, totaling 62,796 tonnes per annum by 2020.
Application
SLI
Buildings, Road and
Railway Tunnels
Data Centers
Total
216
49,507
62,796
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