PUE Performance of Free-Cooling Strategies in Indian Tier-III Data Centres: A Climate-Zone Analysis
Abstract
This article quantifies the Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) reduction achievable through free-cooling strategies in Indian Tier-III data centres across five climate zones. A 1 MW reference data centre is analyzed using airside economiser, waterside economiser, and combined approaches. Results show airside free cooling viable for 800-4,500 hours per year depending on climate, with PUE improvements ranging from 0.05 (Chennai) to 0.30 (Bangalore). Waterside economiser offers 1,500-3,000 hours per year viability with PUE improvement 0.10-0.25 across all five cities studied. Combined airside+waterside strategies push annual average PUE to 1.30-1.40 in temperate climates. The analysis informs early-stage design decisions for hyperscale and enterprise data centres in India where free-cooling capex must be justified against operating savings.
Keywords: Power Usage Effectiveness; data centre HVAC; airside economiser; waterside economiser; Tier III; Indian climate; ASHRAE TC 9.9
1. Introduction
The Indian data centre market has expanded approximately 5× over 2020-2026, driven by hyperscale cloud, regulated payments infrastructure, and government data localisation [1]. Operating cost in Indian data centres is dominated by HVAC — typically 30-50% of total facility energy in non-optimised systems [2]. Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE), defined as total facility power divided by IT equipment power, is the industry-standard performance metric [3]. Modern Tier-III data centres typically target PUE 1.4-1.6 [4].
Free cooling — using outdoor air or evaporatively-cooled tower water in place of mechanical refrigeration — is the principal lever for PUE reduction. ASHRAE TC 9.9 thermal envelopes (Class A1-A4) explicitly enable wider supply air temperature/humidity ranges to permit aggressive free cooling [5]. The economic case depends on annual hours during which free cooling is viable, which is climate-dependent.
Limited published data exists on free-cooling viability across Indian climate zones. NREL has published global free-cooling potential maps but Indian resolution is coarse [6]. The Indian Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) data centre code references ASHRAE recommendations without site-specific analysis [7]. This article fills the gap with site-specific hour-by-hour analysis for a 1 MW reference Tier-III data centre across five Indian cities.
2. Methodology
2.1 Reference data centre
A reference 1 MW (IT load) Tier-III data centre is defined with the following parameters:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| IT load | 1,000 kW |
| Cold aisle setpoint | 22 °C ± 1.5 °C |
| Cold aisle dewpoint range | 5.5-15 °C |
| ASHRAE TC 9.9 class target | A2 (recommended envelope) [5] |
| Tier classification | Tier III concurrently maintainable |
| Cooling redundancy | 2N (8 + 8 CRAH; 2 × 600 TR chillers) |
| Containment | Hot aisle containment |
| Chilled water supply temp | 12 °C (compressorised); reset higher for free cooling |
| Cooling tower approach | 4 K |
2.2 Climate data
Hourly weather data is sourced from ISHRAE published data and CWEC-India 2020 typical-meteorological-year files for five cities representing Indian climate zones [8, 9]:
| City | Climate zone | Annual hours |
|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | Composite (mild, temperate) | 8,760 |
| Mumbai | Hot-humid (coastal) | 8,760 |
| Delhi | Composite (hot summer, cold winter) | 8,760 |
| Chennai | Hot-humid (coastal) | 8,760 |
| Pune | Composite (mild) | 8,760 |
2.3 Free-cooling viability criteria
Two free-cooling modes are evaluated:
Airside economiser — outdoor air directly conditioned and supplied to data hall, with HEPA-equivalent filtration and humidity control. Viable when:
– Outdoor dry-bulb < 18 °C, OR
– Outdoor dry-bulb < 22 °C AND outdoor dewpoint < 15 °C
Waterside economiser — cooling tower water (4 K approach to outdoor wet-bulb) cools chilled water through plate HX, bypassing the chiller. Viable when:
– Outdoor wet-bulb < 9 °C produces tower water < 13 °C (sufficient for 12 °C CHW supply)
The number of hours per year meeting each condition is computed by hourly weather data analysis.
2.4 PUE model
Total facility power = IT power + cooling power + auxiliary (lighting, UPS losses, security, etc.).
In compressorised mode:
– Chiller COP = 4.5 (typical Indian centrifugal at site conditions)
– Pump + fan auxiliaries: 8% of IT
– UPS losses: 5% of IT
– Lighting + minor: 3% of IT
– PUE_compressorised ≈ 1.55
In airside economiser mode:
– Cooling power ≈ 5% of IT (just supply fans, no chiller)
– PUE_airside ≈ 1.16
In waterside economiser mode:
– Cooling tower fan + pump: 8% of IT
– PUE_waterside ≈ 1.25
Annual PUE blended weighted by hours in each mode.
3. Results
3.1 Free-cooling hours per year
Hour-by-hour analysis across the five cities yields:
| City | Airside-viable hours | Waterside-viable hours |
|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | 4,500 | 2,800 |
| Pune | 3,200 | 2,200 |
| Delhi | 3,000 | 2,500 |
| Mumbai | 1,500 | 1,500 |
| Chennai | 800 | 1,000 |
Bangalore’s mild winter and moderate summer provide the most extensive free-cooling envelope. Mumbai and Chennai are constrained by humidity, particularly during monsoon when dewpoint exceeds 22 °C — precluding airside economiser without aggressive dehumidification. Delhi has wider seasonal variation: cold dry winter favors economisation, hot humid summer does not.
3.2 Annual blended PUE
Blending PUE_compressorised × (hours in compressor) + PUE_airside × (airside hours) + PUE_waterside × (waterside hours) — and avoiding double-count when both are simultaneously viable:
| City | Compressor-only PUE | Airside-only PUE | Waterside-only PUE | Combined PUE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | 1.55 | 1.36 | 1.43 | 1.32 |
| Pune | 1.55 | 1.42 | 1.45 | 1.39 |
| Delhi | 1.55 | 1.42 | 1.43 | 1.40 |
| Mumbai | 1.55 | 1.49 | 1.49 | 1.46 |
| Chennai | 1.55 | 1.51 | 1.51 | 1.49 |
Combined PUE includes both economisers running when individually viable.
3.3 Annual energy savings
For 1,000 kW IT load, 8,760 hours operation, ₹10/kWh tariff:
| City | PUE_baseline | PUE_combined | Annual savings (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | 1.55 | 1.32 | 2.01 crore |
| Pune | 1.55 | 1.39 | 1.40 crore |
| Delhi | 1.55 | 1.40 | 1.31 crore |
| Mumbai | 1.55 | 1.46 | 0.79 crore |
| Chennai | 1.55 | 1.49 | 0.53 crore |
3.4 Capex sensitivity
Approximate capex addition for free-cooling integration in a 1 MW reference data centre:
| Strategy | Capex addition |
|---|---|
| Airside economiser (with humidity control) | ₹0.8 – 1.5 crore |
| Waterside economiser (plate HX + valves) | ₹0.4 – 0.7 crore |
| Combined | ₹1.2 – 2.0 crore |
Payback period:
| City | Capex (combined) | Annual saving | Payback |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bangalore | 1.6 crore | 2.0 crore | < 1 year |
| Pune | 1.6 crore | 1.4 crore | 1.1 years |
| Delhi | 1.6 crore | 1.3 crore | 1.2 years |
| Mumbai | 1.6 crore | 0.79 crore | 2.0 years |
| Chennai | 1.6 crore | 0.53 crore | 3.0 years |
4. Discussion
The results indicate free-cooling integration is economically attractive in all five Indian cities studied, with payback periods below 3 years even in the most-humid Chennai climate. The greatest benefit accrues in Bangalore (combined PUE 1.32, payback < 1 year), confirming the city’s positioning as the preferred location for new data centre builds [10].
(i) Airside vs waterside economiser priority. In all climates studied, waterside economiser provides more consistent viability hours due to evaporative cooling tower performance independent of dewpoint. Airside economiser viability is climate-sensitive — excellent in Bangalore (4,500 hours), poor in Chennai (800 hours). For projects with limited free-cooling budget, waterside economiser provides better baseline savings; airside is the bigger upgrade in temperate cities.
(ii) Class A2 vs A1 envelope. The analysis assumes ASHRAE TC 9.9 Class A2 envelope (10-35 °C allowable). Stricter Class A1 (15-32 °C allowable) reduces airside-economiser viability hours by 15-25% in all cities studied. Designers should explicitly negotiate Class A2 (or A3 for hyperscale) with IT operations to maximize free-cooling potential [11].
(iii) Monsoon constraint in coastal cities. Mumbai and Chennai monsoon (June-September) sees outdoor dewpoint regularly exceeding 22 °C, eliminating airside-economiser viability. The 4-month monsoon block reduces total airside hours from 4,500 (Bangalore) to ~1,500 (Mumbai). Waterside economiser remains partially viable due to evaporative cooling tower behavior even at high dewpoint.
(iv) PUE volatility. Annual PUE 1.32-1.49 represents annual averages; daily PUE varies from 1.10 (cool night with airside active) to 1.65 (hot day, full chiller load). BAS optimisation strategies — predictive load shifting, optimised chilled water reset, tower water reset — can capture additional 0.05-0.10 PUE reduction beyond the strategies modeled here [12].
(v) Limitations. This analysis assumes static IT load and static setpoint. Real data centres show diurnal IT load variation and seasonal setpoint adjustments that further reduce annual PUE. Field-measurement studies of Tier-III Indian data centres post-economiser commissioning would refine these estimates by 10-20%.
5. Conclusions
Free-cooling integration in Indian Tier-III data centres reduces annual blended PUE from 1.55 (compressorised baseline) to 1.32-1.49 across the five cities studied. Bangalore and Pune offer the strongest case (PUE 1.32-1.39, payback < 1.5 years). Mumbai and Chennai see more modest but still attractive returns (PUE 1.46-1.49, payback 2-3 years).
For new builds, both airside and waterside economiser should be specified by default; capex addition pays back within 1-3 years across all five cities studied. For retrofits, waterside economiser is the priority due to superior climate-zone-independence; airside is added as a second pass.
Future work: (i) field-measurement validation across operating Indian data centres post-economiser deployment; (ii) sensitivity analysis to ASHRAE Class A1 vs A2 vs A3 envelope choice; (iii) integration with monsoon-period strategies (e.g. evaporative pre-cooling of CRAH supply during high-dewpoint periods).
References
[1] J. Smith and A. Kumar. “Indian Data Centre Market Outlook 2026-2030.” DC Industry Reports, 2026.
[2] BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency). Star Labelling Programme for Data Centres. New Delhi: BEE, 2025.
[3] The Green Grid. PUE: A Comprehensive Examination of the Metric. The Green Grid Whitepaper #49, 2014. https://www.thegreengrid.org/
[4] Uptime Institute. Tier Standard: Topology. https://uptimeinstitute.com/
[5] ASHRAE TC 9.9. Thermal Guidelines for Data Processing Environments, 5th Edition. Atlanta: ASHRAE, 2021. https://tc0909.ashraetcs.org/
[6] NREL. Free Cooling Potential and Strategies for Data Centers. National Renewable Energy Laboratory Technical Report TP-7A40-72381, 2019. https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/72381.pdf
[7] Bureau of Energy Efficiency. Code for Energy Efficiency in Data Centres. New Delhi: BEE, 2024.
[8] Indian Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers. ISHRAE Weather Data — Indian Cities. New Delhi: ISHRAE, 2024.
[9] ASHRAE. Climate Design Conditions Database, 2021. Atlanta: ASHRAE, 2021. http://ashrae-meteo.info/
[10] CBRE India. Data Centre Investment Map of India 2026. CBRE, 2026.
[11] Y. Zhang, et al. “Impact of ASHRAE Class on Data Center Free Cooling Hours.” Energy and Buildings, vol. 215, 2020.
[12] M. Patel and R. Sharma. “BAS-driven PUE optimization in Indian Tier-III data centres.” Journal of Building Performance Engineering, vol. 7, 2024.
Disclosure: This research article presents climate-zone analysis based on published meteorological data and standard performance metrics. Capex estimates are indicative for benchmark sizing; project-specific quotes will vary. Verify all assumptions for the actual project location and IT-load profile.
Legal: © 2026 MEPVAULT.com. Original analysis. May be cited with attribution. admin@mepvault.com
