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.


EPA Strengthens Energy Star Program For Energy Efficient Homes

April 19, 2010

The Environmental Protection Agency raised the bar for the energy efficiency of new homes, strengthening the requirements necessary for them to receive the Energy Star label.

The new guidelines require a 20% improvement over the 2009 International Energy Conservation Code

The new guidelines, released Monday, ensure that new homes qualifying for the Energy Star designation are 20 percent more efficient than those built to the 2009 International Energy Conservation Code. That will translate into 15 percent savings on utility bills.

The previous benchmark was at least a 15 percent improvement over the 2004 International Residential Code – or roughly 20 percent to 30 percent more efficient than standard homes.

The new guidelines will go into effect in January 2011.

So far, more than 1 million Energy Star homes have been built in the United States and 8,500 contractors work to the standards. The EPA estimates that families living the homes saved $270 million on utility bills.

The new measures call for more complete air sealing with insulation and high performance windows. They also require high-efficiency heating and cooling systems. Along with saving money, the improvements should better control moisture, improve air circulation and enhance comfort.

The new guidelines also stress the use of energy efficient lighting and require more complete efforts to use flashing and moisture barriers to keep rain water away from walls, roofs and foundations.

Energy Star homes require verification by inspectors using special diagnostic equipment.


Xerox Appears To Be More Confident About Energy Star Goal

April 8, 2010

Despite the spread of the Internet and the growing use of digital documents, paper consumption in offices continues to grow.

The average U.S. employee uses 10,000 sheets a year, according to copier maker Xerox. So does this mean the paperless office, first envisioned 30 years ago, is still a distant dream?

The copier company hopes that 100 percent of its products will be Energy Star qualified in three years.

“I think that’s true,” says Debra Koehler, director of sustainability in the company’s solid-ink products group. This copy-and-print reality of today’s work place has put energy consumption in the cross hairs of a company trying to deliver ecological benefit to its printer and copier customers.

Xerox claims to be making progress. Lowering energy use is a higher priority than it was just six months ago and the aim is to have 100 percent of its products Energy Star qualified within three years. That would be up from 80 percent today.

Xerox appears to be more confident about hitting the target. Koehler says of the solid-ink unit, “I am confident we will deliver on these goals with our next generation of products,” scheduled to hit stores in two to three years. Improvements are being made not just with electronics, but with energy management software, controllers and insulation.

Energy use should be down by 80 percent in the next several years, she said.


Good News For The Green Builders – Feds Want To Spend $3.6B

October 19, 2009

There are 130 million homes in the United States and the energy they use accounts for 20 percent of the nation’s carbon dioxide emissions.

Retrofit them using existing technologies, such as adding insulation, and energy use falls 40 percent. Even if just 15 percent of the properties were to retrofit, the savings would amount to 4 percent of what the nation needs to turn back emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.

Feds want to turn your house green and cut energy use by 40 percent

Feds want to turn your house green and cut energy use by 40 percent

That’s the reasoning behind the federal government’s green home program, rolled out by Vice President Joe Biden on Monday. To accomplish this goal, the government has $3.6 billion it wants to distribute in the form of loans homeowners that get attached to property tax bills.

Biden announced the government has received applications for $80 billion of pilot project work under the PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) program. PACE is already under way in several states, but now the federal government has signed on capital.

To participate, a homeowner needs to agree to attach some of all of the improvements to his or her property tax bill. Current PACE programs have let some consumers attach their payments to their utility bills. Payments can be spreads out over the life of the improvements.

As part of the program, the Department of Energy and the EPA are working to create an Energy Star rating for retrofitted homes. New homes can already quality for Energy Star designation.


Energy Star Comes To Networking Gear, Storage On Fast Track

September 24, 2009

The EPA is looking closely at establishing Energy Star ratings for networking gear, the kind made by companies such as Cisco Systems.

Ratings for storage gear could be release during the first half of 2010

Ratings for storage gear could be release during the first half of 2010

Speaking at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, EPA Program Manager Andrew Fanara said ratings for networking equipment could be ready late next year.

He also said ratings for storage gear could be released during the first half of 2010, earlier than some industry observers expected. The ratings had been anticipated later in the year.

The Energy Star program, established 17 years ago, develops voluntary guidelines for comparing the energy efficiency of consumer products. It has been broadened recently to commercial equipment. Servers were added in May and a data center benchmark is under development for early next year.

Revised server specifications are possible by late next year and ratings for uninterruptible power supplies are under consideration.

The new standards come as governments around the world show increased interest in energy efficiency labeling. Manufacturers worry that conflicting standards could complicate their efforts to develop products that can be used widely, country to country.


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