IBM today revealed further details about its strategy to lower the energy use
and environmental impact of its customers' datacentres with the launch of a new
tool for measuring datacentre carbon emissions and plans for an energy efficient
new cooling system.
The company - which earlier this month pledged to invest $1bn a year in
doubling the capacity of its own datacentres while maintaining the same energy
footprint - said that it was developing a raft of new technologies and
approaches that would allow firms to cut datacentre power consumption by around
50 percent, allowing them to either reduce electricity bills or more easily
expand their computing capacity.
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As part of the new strategy the company today unveiled an extension to its
Zodiac consultancy service, providing customers with a new toolset for measuring
their datacentre's carbon footprint.
"The aim is to not only let customers see the staff and space savings that
come from server consolidation, but also the energy and CO2 savings," explained
Steve Bowden, green computing consultant at IBM's Systems and Technology Group.
"It means firms also have the information they need to offset their emissions if
they choose."
The new service will also be joined by a free online questionnaire-based tool
designed to assess the energy efficiency of a firm's datacentre and a new energy
efficiency incentive finder, which will be available globally later in the year
and will provide datacentre managers with information on the government
incentives available around more energy efficient equipment.
Steve Sams, vice president of global site and facilities services at IBM,
said the aim of the new services and tools was to give IT chiefs greater insight
into the energy their datacentres use. "This is about giving people a set of
facts that allow them to think green," he said. "In 99 percent of cases when I
go into the datacentre and ask how energy efficient they are I am met with blank
looks."
Sams added that alongside the new services the company was also investing in
a raft of new energy efficient infrastructure solutions, including new
integrated racks systems that use a raised floor and integrated cabling to
maximise cooling efficiency, water cooled server rack doors, new Tivoli
management software capabilities that manage server configurations based on
energy use, and a component-based datacentre design aimed at midmarket firms.
The company also confirmed plans for a new "cold battery" that is installed
between the chiller and HVAC unit and works as a cold store, allowing firms to
run their chilling unit at full capacity and then turn them off when the battery
has been fully "charged".
Sams said that the "cold battery", which consists of a solution containing 30
materials that solidifies when it gets cold, allows firms to only run chiller
units at their maximum efficiency and even turn them off during the day when
electricity prices are highest. He added that the system would be available in
the US from July and could reduce power consumption by up to 45 percent compared
to conventional cooling systems.
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