Server consolidation and a refresh of all laptops and desktops will be major
contributors to the cost savings, which will also deliver annual power savings
of 50 GigaWatt hours.
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Frank Tudor, director of supplier relationship and performance management at
the DWP, said the IT refresh, which began in 2005, became increasingly about
saving energy.
“The primary driver was a necessary refresh - the green agenda came in later
in the programme, but it has become vital for the organisation,” he said.
The DWP has transferred its entire infrastructure to
supplier EDS as part of a managed hosting deal
paid for on a per-user per-month basis. This utility model drives
energy-efficiency incentives for EDS.
More than 140,000 laptops and desktops have been replaced with more
energy-efficient models, 25,000 machines have been scrapped, and 2,500 servers
in six datacentres consolidated to 40 servers in two locations.
DWP’s call centre - one of the largest in Europe - has been moved to an
IP-based network.
Software from supplier 1E is used to switch
off all PCs at evenings and weekends, and a management system is used to put
printers into sleep mode.
“We have used sustainability and cost-savings to drive through improvement,”
said Tudor.
But organisations should be wary of overplaying the environmental aspects of
more efficient IT systems, said Gartner
analyst Mark Raskino.
“A tendency to directly equate green IT issues with lean IT will lead to
deceptive short-term progress, and we believe it will equally often lead to
longer-term pain,” he said.
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