The credibility of Iceland as a provider of green datacentres powered by
geothermal energy and capable of storing huge quantities of electronic data for
firms in Europe and North America could be about to take a major step forward,
according to Icelandic data storage specialist
Data Islandia and its partner
Hitachi Data Systems (HDS).
Iceland has long been touted as a potential "datacentre capital of the world
" with IT experts claiming that the country's geothermal energy and low
temperatures represent the
perfect
location for server farms under growing financial and environmental
pressures to curb energy use.
However, the country's emergence as a datacentre location has been hampered
by concerns over bandwidth and the speed with which data held in Icelandic
facilities can be accessed.
Now Data Islandia and HDS claim to have developed a work around to the
problem with the launch of a new disk-based storage device, known as a Data
Scooter and designed to ferry stored data between companies' own datacentres and
Data Islandia's new Icelandic storage facility, scheduled to be completed later
this year.
"It can take up to three days to transfer a petabyte of data by cable,"
explained Sol Squire, managing director for offshore operations at Data
Islandia. "By putting the data on the Data Scooter and flying it [to Iceland]
you can complete the data transfer in less than a day."
The system will allow firms to encrypt and transfer the estimated 75 per cent
of data that they store, often under legal obligation, but rarely have to
access. The data will then be physically moved to Data Islandia's new zero
carbon datacentre near Reykjavík airport where it will be transferred onto the
company's disk-based storage systems and archived so that the data can be
quickly recovered if required.
Squire insisted that the approach was both cheaper and more secure than
sending the data over cables. "The data is encrypted, it travels with a security
guard, it doesn’t go through [Heathrow's] Terminal 5," he said. "We also only
delete the original version of the data once the transfer is fully complete."
Additionally, the whole system – which is the size of a medium-sized coffee
table and can be easily transported by one person – is ruggedised to withstand a
fall of up to 50ft and can operate in extreme temperatures.
Alec Bruce, ecosolutions champion at HDS which developed the technology
alongside Data Islandia, said that a strong sales pipeline was already in place
for the new service, particularly among telco, healthcare and banking firms,
which are facing increased regulatory pressure to store data but are finding
that energy costs and planning restrictions are constraining their ability to
expand their existing datacenters to meet those legal requirements.
"People's attitudes are changing," added Squire. "There used to be a sense
that you should never send data outside your own datacentre, but people are
realising that approach is a horribly expensive option and the security is now
there to enable transfer of data to more appropriate, environmentally friendly
and cheaper locations."
He added that the Data Scooter could also be used internally by firms looking
to transfer data securely between different datacentres.
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