Taking green IT beyond the data centre
By Miya Knights,
LeClair added that CA was actively working with customers to maximise the energy efficiency of new hardware installations and, perhaps more importantly, extend the life, efficiency and capacity of current hardware configurations through the adoption of new IT infrastructure management software.
Finding the right balance
“Our customers have seen that better management of the IT infrastructure can bring both cost savings and environmental benefits,” he said. “To reap true cost-savings, IT executives must look to implement software management technology that enables better measurement and performance of the IT infrastructure.”
The majority of companies CA surveyed were currently using software systems for network, database, systems performance, configuration and asset management. But more US companies had taken on software to improve the efficiency of their data centres overall than in the UK.
Approximately 60 per cent of those polled in the US had applied software in their data centres or to servers to help manage energy efficiency and more than half managed efficiency by applying management software to their mainframes.
And US firms were also more likely than their UK counterparts to currently be using network management software and virtual machine software.
Putting your money where your mouth is
The transatlantic survey also measured the contribution of green IT initiatives and found virtual machine software, application performance management and database management were the software areas UK firms reported as above average for budget and for current contribution.
But even CA’s research found that UK organisations are limiting the scope of their green efforts, as virtual machine software was the only area that UK IT executives considered to be above average for budget and provide above average satisfaction ratings with their current software’s contribution to green initiatives.
It seems as though that some areas like videoconferencing and remote working slip under the radar. Ian Osborne, director of the Grid Computing Now! initiative run by IT trade body Intellect, told IT PRO organisations should also be looking to cloud computing as an enabler of many future green IT deployments.
“On the green side, you have the likes of Google, Amazon and Microsoft that are working to obtain carbon neutral IT infrastructures,” he said. “And it may well be that the carbon footprint of the most energy hungry IT infrastructures are chock full of non-efficient legacy and data centre kit. But, where servers can make up 40 per cent of an IT organisation’s electricity bill, you might as well as look at using the cloud.”
Hitachi Data Systems (HDS) is one of the many vendors investing in the cloud for its green capabilities. Tony Reid, HDS UK services director, added: “There’s a huge amount of hype around cloud at the moment, with a lot of vendors claiming to be doing things ‘in the cloud’. But from my perspective, it offers the opportunity to flex IT infrastructures more dynamically to meet business demands – it’s because of demand that IT organisations have to look at energy as well as cost.”
Between the data centre and desktop, it seems as though for every power-hungry element in an average IT infrastructure, there’s now a green IT solution in development out there. The only factor is how motivated you’re organisation is to get out there and find them.
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Ethical asset register is key to green IT
Every organisation is under increasing pressure from customers, employees, shareholders and government to be more environmentally aware. But the green bandwagon has proved too tempting for some organisations looking to boost ethical credentials via headline grabbing policies way before they have achieved tangible change. The increasing pressure on UK businesses for green credentials will create a significant cost for them unless organisations get their asset registers in order. Assessment of environmental practices and reporting is certainly on the increase for business and generic statements about green strategies – from procurement to recycling, carbon footprint to flexible working – will not suffice in the long term: organisations will have to prove their commitment through information transparency and auditable policies. At the heart of such transparency will be consistent, detailed information about the life cycle of every asset - from country of origin through maintenance schedules to final disposal. Existing green policies such as the WEEE directive and measuring carbon footprints assume a level of asset management far beyond that achieved by the majority of UK business. How many UK businesses can accurately identify the location of their WEEE equipment within the organisation and confirm when it was purchased and from whom? By linking the asset register to a document management system organisations can create the required audit trail, gaining valuable insight into their own assets and adapting to the ‘green economy’. Yours faithfully, Karen Conneely Group Commercial Manager Real Asset Management Central Court Knoll Rise Oprington Kent BR6 0JA 01689 892100 www.realassetmgt.co.uk
By Ip_clairel2adbaa on Monday Feb 23