Firms are wasting millions of pounds on their energy bills, emitting vast
amounts of carbon dioxide and could even be undermining the reliability of their
IT equipment as a result of their desire to keep the air in their server farms
significantly colder than is technically required.
That is the view of Albert Esser, vice president of datacentre infrastructure
at IT hardware giant
Dell,
who argued that some datacentres could cut their energy bills by up to five per
cent with no adverse impact on their servers' reliability by simply increasing
the temperature of their server farms by five degrees.
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"A culture has developed among datacentre managers that the colder it is the
better," he said. "But as long as you stay within the equipment manufacturers'
specifications you can often keep the ambient temperature higher – cutting the
energy bills and saving substantial amounts of money."
He added that firms could reduce cooling demands further by optimising the
layout of their datacentres. "The reason a typical datacentre is so cold is
because they have to cool a couple of racks that run very hot," he said. "If
they address those few racks and perhaps spread out the servers more, they can
raise the ambient temperature."
According to Dell, air being pumped into a datacentre can typically be as
cold as 19 degrees centigrade, despite the fact that systems will remain
reliable as long as the temperature is lower than 25 degrees centigrade.
Esser pointed to a recent datacentre rollout that Dell contributed to, where
the temperature was kept at 19 degrees, resulting in a Power Usage Effectiveness
(PUE) ratio for the datacentre of 1.8. This means that for every watt used to
power the servers, 1.8 entered the datacentres. However, when the temperature
was raised to 23 degrees the energy efficiency of the facility improved
significantly, resulting in a PUE of 1.3.
He also warned that far from improving the reliability of their servers, some
people were jeopardising it by keeping the temperature in their datacentres too
cold. He said that where managers cut air temperature to cope with server hot
spots the increase in relative humidity levels could lead to water condensation
that results in corrosion of components.
Andy Lawrence, research director for eco-efficient IT at analyst firm
The 451 Group, said there was a
growing consensus amongst datacentre operators and equipment suppliers that
server farms are being run colder than they need to be.
He said that Google has recently presented papers that shows that disk drives
do not fail more often at temperatures of 75 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit, while BT
is on record as saying "all modern systems will operate effectively and reliably
between five and 40 degrees Celsius".
However, Lawrence warned that IT managers should carry out thorough
assessments of their datacentre before turning up the temperature. "It's
simplistic to say that datacentre operators should just go in and turn the
thermostat up a few points," he said. "Especially because heavily laden, mission
critical servers running consolidated workloads can get very hot very quickly if
the cooling isn't working optimally."
Julian King, chief executive of datacentre design and development firm
Galileo Connect, agreed that it was
"entirely feasible" for many datacentres to cut their energy bills by operating
at a higher temperature. But he warned that many IT managers would be reluctant
to let the temperature get as high as the specifications recommended by server
manufacturers of between 23 and 25 degrees.
"The problem is that if you have a cooling system failure and the datacentre
is already pretty warm, you end up with a critical issue far more quickly," he
said.
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