Abstract
In the second annual survey of power and cooling for data centres, research
was extended to include interviewees in Europe, North America and Asia.
The report warns that as overall power consumption is rising, as more space is
taken up with IT equipment, power costs will become the single most important
factor in Data Centre operating costs if nothing is done. Power demand may not
stablise until the medium term.
At the same time, the report noted that since 2006, the incidence of carbon
concerns had increased. The report notes that a number of smaller providers
have entered the market with a “carbon-neutral” Data Centre offer
as a form of differentiation. Data Centre companies who are making the carbon
neutral factor a central part of their sales proposition include Carrier
Neutral Data Centre provider Evoswitch in the Netherlands and managed service
provider Centrinet' s Smart Bunker complex in the UK.
However the main concern expressed across all companies surveyed is the
soaring cost of energy and the reduction of energy usage and adoption of green
policies is now a top priority in the IT environment. Yet what was once
considered a solution, blade servers are typically running at below full
capacity with no more than 20 blades being put into a rack due to the
limitations of cooling in the Data Centre.
The survey documents and identifies a range of issues providing valuable input
in understanding the current status of data centres in terms of strategies for
power and cooling : the most common actions used to create a greener Data
Centre facility, regulatory and legal requirements driving power and cooling
including in particular the rise of corporate social responsibility (CSR), the
data centre ecosystem and its relationship with power and cooling, external
factors impacting data centres, and provides a range of best of breed data
centre case studies.
Methodically assessing an array of current and new power and cooling
technologies, the survey captures the most important developments in progress
providing useful summaries to support the formulation of management
strategies. For the moment however, the survey concludes that it is unlikely
that a standard Data Centre design will be able to improve on the 1 unit of
power to 0.6 cooling ratio unless there is a change in technology. Yet New
types of energy storage and power hold the promise of further efficiency gains
once their commercial potential can be proven.
Usefully, the Survey includes an executive summary comprising of 27 key points
as a management digest of the entire report. The survey also includes summary
boxes throughout containing pertinent comments obtained from interviews
conducted for the survey.
Key Benefits of the Report
- 2nd annual survey Data Centre power and cooling
- Analysis of current status of power and cooling technologies
- Making the data centre Green
- 20 Tables and Charts
- 101 pp (Size 10 font)
Who Should Buy this Report
- Enterprise Data Centre Owners and Users
- Data Centre Operators
- Telecommunication Service Providers
- Power Companies
- Power and Cooling Solution Providers
- Environmental Agencies
- Technical Property Specialists
- Systems Integrators
- Disaster Recovery and Business Continuity Specialists
- Software Companies