Off-Prem

PaaS + IaaS

Alibaba Cloud struggles after blaze at Digital Realty Singapore datacenter

Chinese giant claims lithium batteries exploded, now one server hall is waterlogged


At least a portion of Chinese web giant Alibaba's online services have been disrupted by a fire at a Singapore datacenter following what's said to be an Li-ion battery explosion.

Singapore media reports the blaze started Tuesday morning, local time, in the battery room of one of the datacenter's buildings.

A spokesperson for Digital Realty, which operates the facility, told us it “became aware of a fire alarm being triggered at our SIN11 datacenter at 0745 on September 10, 2024. All on-site personnel were safely evacuated by 0815 and no injuries are reported.”

The abnormality was caused by the explosion of lithium batteries

Singapore’s Civil Defence Force responded to the fire, and businesses affected by the blaze at the computing facility were told to activate their disaster continuity plans.

An Alibaba Cloud status report disclosed it detected anomalies in Availability Zone C of its Singapore region at 1020 SGT Tuesday, “causing some cloud services to function abnormally.”

“The abnormality was caused by the explosion of lithium batteries in the Singapore data center, which led to fire and elevated temperature,” reads a later update.

The Chinese cloud colossus claimed its disaster recovery and fail-over routines worked as intended, meaning high-availability cloud products met promised service levels, though said some users would still need to manually migrate workloads away from the flames.

At least some other services and offerings were taken offline as Alibaba waited for temperatures in the datacenter to fall.

As of 2004 SGT Tuesday (1204 UTC, 0504 PT Tuesday) the cloudy concern reported “the fire alarm has not been completely eliminated,” staff could not enter the blaze-hit building, and “some network equipment in the datacenter has experienced abnormalities in high-temperature environments, affecting the network connectivity of some cloud products.”

Customers were warned “the possibility of a complete network outage in Availability Zone C of Singapore will increase,” and advised: “If your business is deployed in Availability Zone C of Singapore, we will assist you in migrating your business as soon as possible.”

At 0146 SGT Wednesday (1746 UTC, 1046 PT Tuesday), things took a turn for the worse.

“The server room has started to experience water accumulation and leaks, posing a risk of electrical short circuits,” said Alibaba, necessitating an emergency power shutdown for one of the buildings in Singapore Availability Zone C.

Network services for other buildings were gradually restored.

Digital Realty confirmed to The Register that as of 0145 SGT on Wednesday it had powered down some electrical systems.

The Register has seen complaints by netizens of outages or service degradation at Digital Ocean, IaaS service Coolify, and Cloudflare, seemingly related to blaze.

Battery fires are a known threat: French cloud OVH lost a datacenter after a fiery UPS mess in 2021.

This is a developing story: The Register will update it as more information comes to hand, and track investigations into the root cause of the incident. ®

Send us news
4 Comments

Energy exec punts datacenter power options out to long term

Bit barns aren't going to hook up to nuclear in a rush

AMD teases its GPU biz 'approaching the scale' of CPU operations

Q3 profits jump 191 percent from last quarter on revenues of $6.2 billion, helped by accelerated interest in Instinct

Datacenter developer says power issues holding up new builds

'The single biggest constraint is access,' says exec looking to invest 'hundreds of millions'

Delta officially launches lawyers at $500M CrowdStrike problem

Legal action comes months after alleging negligence by Falcon vendor

European datacenter energy consumption set to triple by end of decade

McKinsey warns an additional 25GW of mostly green energy will be needed

Google Cloud burst by 12-hour power outage in German region

Loose juice led to cooling issue in one zone, but the pain was widespread

Tech giants set to pay through the nose for nuclear power that's still years away

Google, Amazon, Microsoft dive into costly deals that aren't generating anything yet

UK gov report to propose special zones for datacenters, 'AI visas'

Vendors not keen on 'lengthy bureaucracy,' and cost when they try to hire skilled foreigners

Datacenter CEO faked top-tier IT reliability cert to snag $10.7M SEC deal, DoJ claims

The Uptime Institute rates availability. The 'Uptime Council' … apparently doesn't exist

Microsoft tries out wooden bit barns to cut construction emissions

The two hybrid datacenters promise 35% less embodied carbon than steel builds, 65% less than concrete

Amazon makes $500M bet on itty-bitty nuclear reactors to fuel cloud empire

The duo eyes a target of 5 GW online in US by 2039, assuming tech comes to fruition

Fujitsu, AMD lay groundwork to pair Monaka CPUs with Instinct GPUs

Before you get too excited, Fujitsu's next-gen chips won't ship till 2027