Will EPA Energy Star Label For Data Centers Spark New Debate?

June 7, 2010

The Environmental Protection Agency released its long awaited Energy Star label for data centers on Monday, likely sparking a new round of data-center energy-efficiency improvements.

The initiative should be well received by IT managers, who have long awaited a standard benchmark for energy consumption. “The industry will be happy with some forward movement,” acknowledges Coy Stine, director of data-center services at the engineering firm Bluestone Energy Services of Norwell, MA.

New Energy Star label could spark a new round of efficiency improvements at data centers

However, the decision will focus attention on the failings of the selected benchmark: the Power Usage Effectiveness, and will trigger a debate over how best to calculate efficiency.

The EPA decision has been expected for almost a year, and some data center improvements languished in anticipation. “The industry needed a little bit of a catalyst,” concedes Mark Harris, vice president of product marketing at San Francisco data-center software supplier Modius.

With the Energy Star label now a corporate goal, centers will compete with one another. The EPA’s plan is to award the label only to the top quarter of centers in a particular industry. It also put into place safeguards against gaming. PUE calculations need to be verified by licensed professionals and examined by the agency before accepted.

Data center experts say the EPA will need six to nine months to develop industry-by-industry benchmarks. The EPA didn’t immediately respond with a schedule.

The trouble is the PUE is not the only, or necessarily the best, method for calculating data-center energy use. The metric is a measure of how much data-center power goes directly to computing equipment, thereby a gauge of how much work is done. It is presented as a ratio of total power to compute power.

While it is relatively simple and easily understood, it falls short in a key area. It doesn’t assure that the energy accomplishes useful work – such as processing transaction volume. A server might be idling, not handling a request, and its energy would still be counted as effective power.

A more targeted benchmark under development – the DCeP – compares useful work to total power consumption, but has proved a difficult formula to derive. It is likely several years away.

The PUE, “is a good first step,” says Harris. “The issue is that five years ago we had nothing.” Now there is something.

But the debate is sure to continue. And it will spread publicly, instead of remain confined to the Green Grid, which proposed the use of the PUE. Now that companies have an incentive, they will take an interest in how the calculation is performed. The EPA also may find itself under pressure to come up with best practices.

Without detailed guidelines, the PUE can be gamed, asserts Stine. Every center needs to report total power in the same way, for instance.

Clearly, the new Energy Star label has broad consequences. Data centers are significant consumers of energy and together account for 1.5 percent of U.S. electricity use. Energy consumption, already $4.5 billion, is expected to nearly double over the next five years.

Up to now, data centers have been addressing energy efficiency piecemeal. Blade servers might replace dedicated boxes and old routers swapped out for new ones. IT managers may choose to slow fan speeds in their chillers. But many did not calculate their PUE rating – despite the attention Google brought to the measure by publicizing its own rating. (Google claims its PUE is 1.21. A rating of 1 is perfectly efficient.)

Now there is an incentive to view data-center energy management more holistically. It comes not a moment too soon.


Smart Grids Will Bring Massive Data Center Buildouts At Utilities

October 22, 2009

Mention smart grid and most people think of advanced electric meters sending reams of information to utilities.

That information is hoped to help consumers make better decisions about when and why they use energy.

But there is another key component to the consumer-facing smart grid beyond the so-called smart meter. Utilities need powerful new, Google-like data centers to make sense of all the information they will receive.

Electricity use data will flow into utility data centers as quickly as every 15 minutes instead of once a day

Electricity use data will flow into utility data centers as quickly as every 15 minutes instead of once a day

Utilities are in varying degrees of preparing their data centers for this new smart-grid world, says Inbar Lasser-Raab, senior director of marketing for network and smart grid systems at Cisco Systems. Some are focused first on the communications infrastructure (i.e.: installing smart meters). Others have already begun to tackle the necessary data center build outs.

In either case, the industry appears to be facing a massive remaking of its compute and storage infrastructure over the next several years to deliver on the promise of a more intelligent, more responsive electric grid.

The challenging facing these typically slow moving companies is speed. In the past they might receive data about electric use once a day. In the next few years, that could accelerate to every 15 minutes.

“We’re definitely working with utilities on their data-center infrastructure,” says Lasser-Raab. Some say they expect their facilities to carry them for several years. Others are making plans to boost capacity.

“It’s an industry that is really energized,” she said. And that is a necessary change, both in the data center and outside of it.


Data Center Energy Pressures Could Ease Next Year

September 22, 2009

Data centers are a necessity of the modern 21st Century economy. They keep companies from Google to Procter & Gamble in business.

Starting next year, servers designed to sit at the center of these giant info-warehouses will begin to show some dramatic reductions in energy use.

The result could be big gains in the energy efficiency of data centers. Of course this means replacing computers already in use with new models, something most firms will not do. But overtime as these energy efficient units find their into use spiraling energy costs could for the first time decline.

A Samsung laboratory experiment found that servers expected on the market next year will burn 38 percent less energy than those available today. Part of the reason is the adoption of DDR3 memory chips made with a new generation 40-nanometer manufacturing equipment. The smaller circuitry requires less power. (Samsung is a manufacturer of the chips.)

But the machines also are expected to adopt Energy Star guidelines released by the EPA in May. The guidelines suggest that 30 percent energy savings are possible.

Sylvie Kadivar, an associate director of strategic marketing at Samsung, said Tuesday that a reduction in server energy use is expected. “We obviously believe it will be dramatic,” she said,

The poser savings from a 2GB 40-nanometer DDR3 memory chip could by itself be 73 percent, she said.

How much energy will be saved worldwide from this new generation of server? It is hard to calculate since adoption rates and market growth are hard to predict. But the development does suggest a change in the trend line is possible.


Virtualization Helping To Save Energy In The Data Center

September 1, 2009

Companies generally use virtualization software to consolidate their massive data centers and cut costs.

Environmental benefits, such as a reduction in energy use, come along for the ride. However, these secondary benefits can amount to a substantial portion of the overall expense savings – in some cases up to 15 percent.

It is said corporate America will become a willing soldier in the war against global warming if it can save big bucks in the process. Compressing the workloads of two dozen servers onto a single powerful machine qualifies as big money.

Virtualizing servers cuts power use by consolidating multiple units into one box

Virtualizing servers cuts power use by consolidating multiple computers onto one box. Power savings can be 15% of the total expense cuts.

The savings can amount to millions of dollars and quickly pay back investments in new hardware, software and storage disks. Virtualization helps facilitate this by allowing multiple work environments to operate on one computer.

Most companies are primarily focused on the cost savings, says Robert Zylowski, director of service at consultancy GlassHouse Technologies. “It’s about dollars and cents.”

But the environmental benefits are nothing to ignore. A company saving $3 million over the course of three years will probably end up cutting energy expenses by $450,000, says Zylowski. That’s roughly 15 percent of the overall pie.

Going green can be good business.

Today, between a third and a half of Fortune 500 companies use virtualization. This should rise to between 70 percent and 80 percent, estimates Zylowski.

When the bottom line is added up, that’s a lot of avoided power.


Energy Saving Plan For Data Centers Focuses On Memory Chips

August 26, 2009

It is no secret that powerful data centers, like the ones operated by Google and Yahoo, soak up a great deal of energy.

Samsung Says DDR3 and solid-state drives can lower server energy use by 10 percent

Samsung Says DDR3 and solid-state drives can lower server energy use by 10 percent

By 2011, in fact, data centers in the United States are expected to consume 3 percent of the nation’s electricity – in other words a substantial amount of power. With that energy use will come greenhouse gas emissions.

Finding new data center efficiencies is a multi-front effort. Some companies hope to achieve new efficiencies in the equipment used to cool these information-crunching facilities. Others hope to supply green electricity from renewable sources.

On Tuesday, Samsung suggested an approach that relies on cutting-edge memory chips that do more with less power. Samsung is a maker of memory chips, so it is no surprise the company would focus here. But its arguments are worth considering.

The South Korean company says that if data-center servers used its latest DDR3 memory in place of the DRAM chips commonly used today and solid-state drives based on NAND flash memory instead of hard disk drives the power savings could top 10 percent.

Driving the effectiveness of DDR3 is 40-nm manufacturing, which creates smaller circuits that reply on less electricity.

While concerns over reliability and longevity have dogged the adoption of solid-state drives, replacing a hard disk with SSD can cut power use by 70 percent, the company said. Higher costs have also held back the market.

Still, with energy use a growing concern at data centers large and small, server memory may indeed come to play a role in lowering power needs. And it may happen sooner rather than later.


Data Centers Are Power Hogs, So Cooling System Efficiency Is Key

June 22, 2009

Data center efficiency is more than a luxury.

The lack of power and space is nixing the expansion of existing centers and slowing the construction of new centers at a time when demand for the facilities is outpacing supply. IT managers face few inviting options.

The lack of power is constraining data center expansion and consruction

The lack of power (including for cooling systems) is constraining data center expansion and construction.

Because data centers don’t require a lot of manual labor, adding staff doesn’t solve the problem.

Instead, the biggest source of operational efficiency comes from power use. Already centers in the U.S. use in excess of 61.4 billion kilowatt hours of electricity a year, or more than the automobile industry.

By 2011, this should double, making data centers the nation’s top commercial consumer of power, ahead of metals production.

Between 40 percent and 60 percent of the power use goes toward cooling,. That makes Core4 Systems’ introduction Monday of a more efficient liquid-cooled air conditioning offering all the more interesting.

The Napa company claims its system is significantly more efficient than those in the market and saved its first customer, Sonic.net, 72 percent of its cooling costs.

Core4 is talking to additional potential customers, including Apple and IBM, and claims a system for a small corporate data center costs between $5 million and $7 million.

For reasons stated above, the company could find itself in the right place at the right time. Offering a green-tech contribution to energy efficiency, it could play a role in the fight against global warming.


Brocade Blasts Cisco’s Data Center Strategy

March 24, 2009

Inexperienced, proprietary and self-serving.

That’s how rivals describe Cisco System’s big push into the data center last week.

I think its gong to be a tough road, says Mike Klayko

"I think it's going to be a tough road," says Mike Klayko

With typical marketing aplomb, Cisco unveiled its Unified Computing System last Monday along with a promise to save customers 30 percent of their operating costs. The cost cuts come, it said, if they turned to Cisco for a broad range of their networking, storage and computing needs.

To make good on this last point, Cisco introduced its first blade servers.

Some rivals answered back almost immediately. “Would you let a plumber build your house?” asked Jim Ganthier, Hewlett-Packard’s vice president of infrastructure software and blades, according to eWeek.

On Monday, Brocade Communications Systems offered a pithy criticism of its own. And it boiled down to this: would you trust your infrastructure to unproven gear?

“I’m not sure the largest accounts in the world will put their most critical applications …on a version one product,” said Brocade CEO Mike Klayko in a video posted to You Tube. “I think it is going to be a tough road just because…they’re not a known expert in that space.”

Klayko argued that H-P, IBM and Dell are on version six and seven of their servers and that saving costs is not a secret known only to Cisco.

“We’re all going toward the same goal of taking cost out of the environment,” he said. “I just think we are better positioned.”

Of course, time will tell who is right.


Dell Hopes To Fire Up Its Consulting Unit With “Do As We Do” Message And Emphasis on Virtualization

December 1, 2008

Dell hopes to step up its services and consulting business with a “do as we do” message based on lessons the company learned from its own data centers.

Dell competes in services with more established IBM and Hewlett-Packard

Dell competes in services with more established IBM and Hewlett-Packard

The computer maker will launch its Data Center Optimization Services on Tuesday claiming that virtualization and other practices could help clients cut data-center energy cost by up to two-thirds.

Dell boasts that is has saved more than $29 million over three years in energy, maintenance and other costs at its data centers – even while computing capacity has risen 270 percent in the past two years.

“We believe we have something here,” says Albert Esser, vice president of power and infrastructure solutions. “Virtualization is really an enabler.”

Even with data center workloads increasing 50 percent a year, clients should be able to keep energy costs from going up, says Esser.

With a more aggressive use of virtualization and a regular plan to refresh equipment every three to four years, their energy bill can go down, he said.

Dell says the expanding use of dual- and quad-core chips in servers has lowered equipment-utilization rates in data centers to 5 percent. Lower utilization typically means less efficiency and higher energy bills.

Dell competes in services and consulting with more established businesses at rivals IBM and Hewlett-Packard.


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