this post was submitted on 19 May 2026
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To harness useful energy from heat, you have to let heat flow from hotter areas to colder areas, to permit entropy to increase.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy
They might be able to harness energy from the flow from warmer to cooler areas, but whether or not they do that, at the end of the day, they have to let the heat go, just like a power plant that uses water-evaporation-assisted cooling. If they're near the ocean, they can maybe stick it into the water instead of the air, and maybe to some degree, you can stick heat into groundwater. But they can't just take a unit of heat and convert it into a unit of useful work and not have that unit of waste heat.
You can, in areas that have a use for heat, make use of that waste heat. For example, district heating can make use of the waste heat from a power plant
you pipe steam or something from the power plant that you want to be cooler to homes that you want to be warmer.
If you live somewhere where that works, it's basically "free" heating from an energy standpoint, which is cool. Much of the US isn't well-suited to residential district heating, because we tend to have residences in low-density suburban areas that are pretty spread out and where it's a pain to transport heat around, but we do have some district heating in city cores. Manhattan, which is one area where we do have high density, famously uses steam heating.
For that to work, you have to actually have some use for that heating (and you probably only want heating some of the year, unless you're up in the polar regions or on a mountain or something).
You can also use waste heat to drive industrial processes that require heat, but waste heat from a datacenter isn't super-hot compared to, say, that from a power plant, so I don't know how interesting that necessarily is. Lots of chemical processes that might require elevating something to a much higher temperature, but a datacenter
at least using current computing hardware
normally tries to keep temperatures from getting to something like the boiling point of water.
Some greenhouses will also use waste heat (in the case of power plants doing cogeneration, some of the waste carbon dioxide as well) to help boost plant growth.
Do it long enough, and even that would become a problem. There are parts of the London Underground that are uncomfortably hot to ride because it's existed so long they've managed to heat-soak the ground around the tunnels.
That's a neat tidbit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Underground_cooling
Fun fact: in switzerland some companies like Infomaniak do give excess heat to the near houses, it's such a cool thing
This guy heats.