Computing recently reported that research from analyst Gartner showed the
world’s data centres are responsible for the same volume of carbon emissions as
the average European country. How can CIOs - and the UK government - help reduce
carbon emissions from IT?
BT is engaged in an ongoing drive to reduce its carbon footprint, using
innovative technology to improve environmental sustainability. BT has already
reduced emissions by 60 per cent between 1996 and 2006, and now aims to extend
that reduction to 80 per cent by 2016 the equivalent annual carbon emissions
produced by 143,000 cars.
BT began the project with an assessment of 90 legacy data centres. Combined,
these data centres had 11,000 server racks powered by an average of 3,000 watts
per rack and 25,000 physical servers.
By using leading-edge technologies such as fresh air cooling, improved
efficiency in energy transfer from the street to the data centre and
virtualisation technologies, BT has saved £3.8m in electricity costs in nine
months.
BT has also reduced overall power consumption by one per cent. Although this
may sound small, BT consumes approximately 0.8 per cent of the total power in
the UK and is one of the largest buyers of green electricity on the planet. BT’s
data centre initiative reduces power consumption, reduces the amount of capital
deployed in building data centres and improves resiliency by simplifying the
power distribution systems.
JP Rangaswami, chief information officer, BT Global Services
The simplest way to reduce data centre power consumption is to stop using air
conditioning compressors when outside air can be used instead. That may seem
scary but there are three main reasons to be careful about using outside air in
a data centre: temperature, humidity and pollution, especially particulate
pollution.
In terms of temperature, the average air temperature in central England is
just over 10 degrees centigrade, so for most days it is suitable. Technologies
such as
air-side economisers are now available that can deliver air at the right
humidity and temperature, leaving your energy intensive compressors to just work
at the times that the air temperature or humidity is too high.
John Proudlock, transformation director, Vertex Financial Services
Gartner calculates that business IT and telecommunications contribute about
two per cent of carbon emissions worldwide. That might not sound like much, but
it is about the same as global aviation and if left unchecked it will
grow faster.
It is also a conservative number for IT which excludes consumer electronics
devices, like set-top boxes. Broadly speaking there are three areas where IT
leaders can help. First, reduce the direct impact of IT operations by setting
specific targets for electrical efficiency improvement and equipment lifecycle
management.
Second, propose ways IT and communications systems could help to better
monitor, measure, manage, curtail and control polluting business processes.
Finally, for those who are truly visionaries in long-term industry and public
policy, consider IT as a possible way to re-shape societal behaviour to meet
environmental goals. For example, do we really need planners to permit more
large out-of-town shopping complexes now that e-commerce is so well established?
Mark Raskino, research vice president and Gartner fellow
Latest estimates calculate that energy consumption globally from IT accounts
for two to four per cent and in the UK between 10 per cent and 12 per cent. IT
definitely has a role to play if the UK government has any chance of hitting its
ambitious climate change goals.
CIOs must work to reduce the environmental impact of computing right through
the business from back-office data centres to the corporate desktop. Carbon
audits, reconfiguring data centres, deploying equipment with power consumption
sensors, upgrading power supplies all help but only scratch the surface of what
needs to be done.
Long-term goals around server and infrastructure virtualisation, data centre
outsourcing, thin client computing, tough supplier benchmarking and even
building incentive schemes that reward IT for low energy consumption, should
appear on the CIO agenda.
The UK government has a role to play and should give closer consideration to
actions currently in play by a number of US states and public utilities that
offer fiscal incentives such as tax credits and energy-efficient product
rebates.
Euan Davis, principal analyst, Forrester Research
Many CIOs are already helping their companies lower their carbon footprint
through encouraging greener working practices from staff, using collaborative
working technologies to reduce travel requirements and using technologies like
virtualisation in the data centre to lower their emissions as well as their
energy bills. Other CIOs are switching to using renewable energy in their data
centres and many are looking at a range of techniques to recycle the heat
generated in data centres in their offices, or even nearby premises and
communities.
However, while some companies are keen to reap the advantages of their green
credentials, wide-scale corporate commitment may be still some way off. While
the environment is well and truly on the CIO’s agenda, financial pressures from
the business mean that competing priorities get in the way. As it so often does,
it all comes down to cost.
Ollie Ross, head of research, The Corporate IT Forum
Having recently relocated our London office we invested in a new data centre
facility. Efficiency was obviously high on our agenda in terms of power,
hardware and space, and affected our procurement decisions. A CIO has the power
to control such decisions and to weigh up the benefits of doing more, based upon
their understanding of the priorities and complexities of the business.
There are other initiatives IT can champion with far greater impact on
eliminating waste and reducing energy consumption than would be possible within
our data centre. With every employee using a PC, campaigning to switch off
equipment at the end of the day, planning efficient printing systems and working
with charities to recycle redundant hardware have significantly reduced resource
consumption and waste. If businesses are really to reduce emissions, the data
centre is only part of the picture.
Jeff Roberts, chief information officer, Norton Rose
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