- cross-posted to:
- europe@feddit.org
- cross-posted to:
- europe@feddit.org
The new computer infrastructure is part of an effort by the company to keep its technology and all its cloud servers in Europe
The new computer infrastructure is part of an effort by the company to keep its technology and all its cloud servers in Europe
Ha.
I just translated it to dollars since it’s more easily comparable for international reading.
You sure you didn’t mean krona? Because 2000 Krona is a lot but sounds easy more realistic than 2000 dollars, considering the conversion rates.
For anyone here that doesn’t know:
100 SEK = 9.50 Euro
100 SEK = 8.92 USD
People in Norrbotten are paying 16k+ SEK for January’s electrical bill, one person paid over 17k. Which is almost 2000 US dollars.
You have a source on that? Pretty sure we in Finland give some electricity even to Sweden from surplus so that doesn’t sound right.
After reading those (good sources btw) - seems it’s really only January that has had really high prices in the Northern areas, due to in part the cold front that hit Finland but also from the new power transfer line that’s being set up, after which it’s expected that Sweden will be taking power generated here. Seems Swedish power generation was also lower than usual January.
We do usually have a surplus, but power consumption here went up both from the sudden cold, nuclear maintenance, and the new sand batteries going up.
Also, some of those places being heated are quite large and older buildings that are undergoing restoration, like a farm.
That said, the data center really only makes sense of it’ll be in Southern Sweden, and by the time it’s up it’ll be years from now. If they don’t fix the price issues after February though, y’all should start seriously protesting.
No, he means dollars. 2000 SEK is pretty much what I pay per month for the really cheap summer months in southern Sweden. Last month I paid closer to 10 000 SEK.
RIP south of Sweden ❤️
I paid about 800 SEK for electricity and hot water combined, including 25% tax, for November. 🙃