Nokia and KDDI trial Japan’s first liquid cooling innovation to promote sustainability.
- Nokia’s unique Liquid Cooling baseband solution cuts cooling energy consumption by more than 70 percent compared to traditional air conditioning systems.
- KDDI will also trial the Nokia AVA solution which applies artificial intelligence to minimize energy consumption across the network.
- Liquid-cooled AirScale Baseband and AVA for energy efficiency solutions are another milestone in Nokia’s commitment to sustainability and combatting climate change.
Traditional air-cooling systems are noisy and require
regular maintenance such as filter changes and re-gassing, however, Nokia’s
Liquid Cooling solution is almost maintenance-free and virtually silent, making
it ideal for buildings with tenants. Nokia’s base station liquid cooling
functionality captures heat into liquid directly where it is generated and
removes it from the site by liquid circulation. It supports the reduction of
cooling-system-related CO2 emissions by more than 70 percent.
KDDI is also trialing Nokia’s Nokia AVA for Energy
Efficiency solution which applies AI to support the challenge of rising energy
consumption in networks. The solution helps to reduce overall energy bills by
up to 20 percent and move towards more sustainable patterns of energy usage.
Nokia AVA blends telecoms expertise, AI, and cloud-based delivery into a
coherent energy control that dynamically adapts energy consumption to traffic
levels while maintaining a premium user experience.
Nokia is committed to reducing the CO2 emissions generated
by its technology. Nokia has committed to cut emissions by 50 percent between
2019 and 2030 as part of its updated science-based climate change targets, in
line with a 1.5°C warming scenario. This target covers emissions across its own
operations and portfolio, logistics, and electronics manufacturing. Nokia intends
to continue its efforts to research and develop solutions that reduce CO2
emissions beyond this trial.
John Lancaster-Lennox, Head of Market Unit Japan at Nokia,
said: “This trial is another milestone in Nokia’s commitment to sustainability
and combatting climate change. Nokia was the first vendor to introduce this
game-changing liquid cooling solution which supports operators in their quest
to be more environmentally responsible while allowing them to achieve
significant cost savings.”