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Google Cloud customers can now track their carbon footprint

Google Cloud is launching a new electricity-tracking product and expanding access to its satellite imagery software, in an effort to introduce more sustainability features to its suite of cloud computing services.

The announcements are among several made at the company’s annual customer conference, Google Cloud Next.

“Carbon Footprint” is a new product that tracks carbon emissions by measuring how much electricity each customer — i.e. company — expends while using the Google Cloud platform.

According to an official blog post, the purpose of the product is to provide companies with data “to show their employees, boards and customers their progress against climate targets.”

The product also flags when customers have unattended or idling projects in the cloud that are using up electricity — similar to how Google Photos will detect duplicate photos and suggest you delete them to save space.

Interestingly, Google Cloud customers are also gaining some access to Google Earth Engine.

Google’s reasoning is that the satellite imagery software will let companies “track, monitor and predict changes in the Earth’s surface due to extreme weather events or human-caused activities” and as a result help them “save on operational costs, mitigate and better manage risks, and become more resilient to climate change threats.”

Last week, Google rolled out a number sustainability-oriented updates to its ubiquitous search engine.

The new features included adding CO2 emission labels to flights in Google Flights listings, adding badges to its hotel search tool indicating whether a hotel is eco-certified, and a forthcoming plan to improve the results page when folks use Google to search for infomation about climate change.

GIF source: Google 

Source: Google

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Mobile Syrup

Google launches new Google Cloud region in Toronto

Google is launching a new Google Cloud region in Toronto, Ontario — its second location in Canada.

This new Cloud region, alongside the Montreal region announced in 2017, offers Canadian businesses the option of storing their data on Google servers housed locally in Canada.

Having two Canadian Google Cloud regions is generally understood as a move towards better data security and privacy, as servers built in the United States — where Google bases its operations — are subject to different federal laws regarding access to information, such as the controversial Patriot Act.

According to the press release, the new Toronto region will help businesses “prevent against service disruptions” and provides faster access to Google’s Cloud Platform services such as: Compute Engine, App Engine, Google Kubernetes Engine, Bigtable, Spanner, and BigQuery.

The press release also featured quotes from a number of Google’s Canadian customers, including TELUS, Scotiabank, Natural Resources Canada, Accenture, Deloitte, and Softchoice.

Notably, Google Cloud recently entered a multi-year partnership with Montreal-based telecom Bell to combine its 5G network with Google’s multi-cloud, data analytics, and artificial intelligence (AI) services.

With this new location in Toronto, there are now 27 Google Cloud regions globally.

Image credit: Google