Half of IT executives admit that their firms do not monitor IT-related energy
spending, according to a new report from the
Economist
Intelligence Unit (EIU).
The research explored the efforts being made by organisations to measure and
reduce the environmental impact of IT infrastructures.
Nearly one in four of those companies that do monitor IT energy consumption
have actually seen their consumption rise over the past two years.
Recent reports suggest that power is becoming the
single most
important factor in data centre operating costs.
But the survey shows that, despite the high profile of environmental issues,
few companies have anything approaching a cohesive strategy for dealing with
power costs from an IT perspective.
However, the EIU report warned that rising energy costs and a growing demand
for power are likely to put energy concerns much higher on the agenda.
"Concerns about energy efficiency and global warming are now high on the
political agenda, but the spotlight has not yet been turned on the IT function,
" said James Watson, manager for industry client research at the EIU, and editor
of the report.
"This survey suggests that few firms have woken up to the fact that their IT
infrastructure is already responsible for a significant proportion of their
total energy costs."
The
US
Environmental Protection Agency noted recently that servers and data centres
in the US accounted for 1.5 per cent of the country's electricity consumption in
2006.
This amounted to around $4.5bn worth of electricity, more than double that
consumed in 2000.
Survey respondents put the blame partly on the lack of visibility about the
issue. Around two-thirds said that an industry standard on energy efficiency for
IT equipment would prompt them to change their procurement policies.
"There is a growing business and legislative need for CIOs to look at their
own organisations to ensure that IT systems and services are as energy efficient
as possible," said Richard Lanyon-Hogg, chief technical officer for green
services at IBM.
"Recent client engagements, and this report, confirm that many organisations
are unsure as to how to measure their IT carbon footprint and bring about
sustainable improvements."
This trend looks likely to change as more high-profile companies such as
Google,
Dell and
Strato set
out clear plans to minimise or even neutralise carbon emissions.
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