Yes, I saw this and followed up with my own analysis. Note, I didn't go to the original article which is paid-subscription only*, but tried to generate similar results using US numbers.
The US gov. "Energy Star" site has a calculator showing the average power draw for various refrigerator styles. Find the "Refrigerator Savings Calculator" in the right-hand sidebar. Download that and go to the Assumptions page (sheet two) to look at the assumptions. Averaging the power use of all the Energy Star refrigerators at the assumed size gives an annual power draw of 486 kWh/year. This is actually an optimistic estimate, probably because it refers to brand-new refrigerators. The
US Department of Energy End-Use Summary of electrical energy use by appliance, for 2001, shows an average refrigerator drawing 1239 kWh/year. This estimate is too conservative, because many older refrigerators have been replaced with more efficient models since 2001.
So let's take the average of these two to represent a better estimate: 863 kWh/year which works out to 98 W on average... let's make it 100W.
If an original PS3 uses its full rated 200W** for an entire year its power draw is twice the average refrigerator. The newer PS3's which pull 140W are equivalent to 1.4 refrigerator. And even my Mac mini, the greenest Folding machine I know, draws 35W: one refrigerator door.
Let's be real: Folding requires electricity. If you turn off or idle your computer, or unplug your PS3 rather than Folding on it, your electric bill will be lower. But F@H is advancing scientific knowledge in important areas:
- protein folding: addressing Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases
- protein-protein interactions: addressing the p53 tumor suppressor protein
- membrane fusion: addressing viral infectivity, AIDS and influenza
- small-molecule interactions with ribosomes: addressing how antibiotics work and how to design better ones
- small-molecule interactions with proteins: addressing drug design for Alzheimer's, metastatic cancer, Huntington's disease
- statistical thermodynamics of protein conformation and protein folding processes: addressing the mutual validation of F@H style computational models and "wet" chemical data on protein folding, and the reliability of small data sets produced by computational models
- small-scale and massive parallelization of molecular dynamics calculations
- methods for general-purpose computing on graphical processing units
This is exciting, cutting-edge science, and when you Fold you are part of it. The research depends on us, the donors. And if you have been following the threads on the GPU2 client, or if you beta test, you know that the full time project researchers value your contribution and listen to your concerns here in the forum. How many other laboratories in the world offer you a chance like that?
Each F@H user needs to make his or her own decision on the tradeoffs among energy use, equipment costs, and monitoring time on the one hand, and the scientific and humanitarian progress, fun and camaraderie of Folding on the other hand. I've thought it through and I know where I stand. I encourage other Folders to do the same.
* If someone has access to the original article in choice.au, please PM me... I'd like to review their assumptions but am too cheap to spend $21 to buy access to their study.
** I don't have a PS3, but various numbers published on the web range from 185W (F@H with screen saver) to 215W (F@H with visuals). Note that if you leave it idle, it still pulls > 170W, so when you finish gaming, either turn it to Folding or to standby.
http://www.aeropause.com/2007/12/profil ... 0-and-wii/
http://www.ecogeek.org/content/view/1102/
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/archive/ ... 84011.html