Nearly two-thirds of IT and facilities staff consider the energy efficiency
of their data centre to be 'average' or 'worse than average', new research
reveals.
A survey conducted by Cassatt Corporation found that the biggest source of
energy wastage is in development and test environments.
More than a quarter of respondents said that more than 60 per cent of their
development and test servers are idle during off-peak hours.
However, 62 per cent are working on a data centre energy efficiency projects
now or expect to within the next year.
The Cassatt 2008 Data Center Energy Efficiency Survey revealed that
virtualisation ranks highest on the energy-efficiency project list.
Some 69 per cent of respondents are pursuing a server
consolidation/virtualisation strategy, and nearly 49 per cent are pursuing
storage consolidation/virtualisation.
However, while nearly half of the companies surveyed need a payback on energy
efficiency projects in under two years, organisations are primarily pursuing
consolidation which is frequently a longer-term project.
More than half of respondents recognise the importance of more efficient
equipment, according to the survey.
But only a quarter have plans to improve the efficient operation of that
equipment with approaches such as active power management software to shut off
unused servers.
The survey shows server power management to be a missed opportunity for many
organisations, but a significant number are looking to complement long-term
projects with techniques designed to deliver compelling short-term benefits.
"Many of the findings were expected, such as those that emphasise the data
centre power crunch, the popularity of virtualisation as a potential solution,
and the massive waste in development and test environments," said Bill Coleman,
chairman and chief executive at Cassatt.
Less expected were the findings showing that many companies simply do not
measure their power consumption at all, or do so at a very superficial level.
"If you cannot measure it, as they say, you cannot manage it. And it may be
that companies are fixing only part of the problem with initiatives based on
incomplete information," said Coleman.
"While organisations are showing a willingness to try some new ideas, many
are still ignoring simpler solutions that could help them with energy efficiency
almost immediately."
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