Bridge Data Centers (BDC), a Singapore- headquartered hyperscale data center provider, and EcoCeres, a China-based innovation and commercialization of renewable fuels and green molecules firm, have successfully completed their inaugural Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil (HVO)-powered backup fuel pilot in Asia Pacific at BDC’s data center campuses.

The pilot covered the full range of emergency backup power scenarios, including generator startup, load transfer and sustained operations under data center conditions, with all performance and emissions targets met, the duo said in a statement on Tuesday.

In addition, BDC has completed large-scale HVO testing across multiple locations.

Building on the success of the pilot, BDC intends to further deploy HVO-powered solutions across its data center campus in Asia Pacific and beyond.

HVO is a next-generation renewable fuel derived from 100% waste-based feedstock and serves as a high-quality drop-in substitute for conventional fossil diesel.

It requires no modifications to existing backup generators and reduces greenhouse gas emissions by up to 90 percent.

“Sustainability is core to BDC’s strategy. As AI workloads continue to scale across the region, we are committed to advancing innovative clean energy solutions that reduce our carbon footprint while meeting the performance and reliability requirements of our hyperscale customers,

“The success of our inaugural pilot in Asia Pacific demonstrates that HVO-powered backup fuel is a feasible and replicable concept for other high-growth data center markets,” said Eric Fan, Chief Executive Officer of Bridge Data Centers.

Matti Lievonen, Chief Executive Officer of EcoCeres, said decarbonizing data centers is one of the most urgent and technically demanding challenges in the net zero transition, and the partnership demonstrates that HVO is ready to perform at scale in real-world operations.

“By proving that waste based renewable fuels can meet stringent reliability and performance requirements in existing diesel backup systems, this pilot offers a practical way for operators to significantly reduce emissions while maintaining the highest standards of reliability,” he added.

The milestone comes after BDC and EcoCeres signed a memorandum of
understanding to jointly pilot and promote HVO adoption in data center operations.

BDC and EcoCeres will collaborate further to develop common standards and practical guidelines to support broader HVO adoption across the data center industry.

The partnership is part of BDC’s wider push to advance clean energy solutions for data centers, which includes developing Singapore’s first floating hydrogen power generation solution tailored for next-generation AI data centers, said the statement.

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