After reading this thread, it was interesting to come across this news story
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-33989384In case the link isn't available in some countries, the gist of this was:
"Google says data has been wiped from discs at one of its data centres in Belgium - after the local power grid was struck by lightning four times.
Some people have permanently lost access to the files on the affected disks as a result.
A number of disks damaged following the lightning strikes did, however, later became accessible.
In an online statement, Google said that data on just 0.000001% of disk space was permanently affected.
"Although automatic auxiliary systems restored power quickly, and the storage systems are designed with battery backup, some recently written data was located on storage systems which were more susceptible to power failure from extended or repeated battery drain," it said."
The main Google statement is here
https://status.cloud.google.com/incident/compute/15056#5719570367119360One fascinating section reads:
"This outage is wholly Google's responsibility. However, we would like to take this opportunity to highlight an important reminder for our customers: GCE instances and Persistent Disks within a zone exist in a single Google datacenter and are therefore unavoidably vulnerable to datacenter-scale disasters. Customers who need maximum availability should be prepared to switch their operations to another GCE zone. For maximum durability we recommend GCE snapshots and Google Cloud Storage as resilient, geographically replicated repositories for your data."