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    Government bodies set to miss own green IT targets?

Some two-thirds of public sector organisations said they don't think they can meet their green IT targets.

By Nicole Kobie, 3 Jul 2009 at 15:54

green computing

Public sector bodies are afraid they won't be able to meet green IT targets set by the government.

Over two-thirds of 150 public sector IT managers polled by Cisco said they don't think they can achieve green IT objectives, which include the government's IT going carbon neutral by 2012.

Just 22 per cent have internal green IT targets, the survey found, while just 13 per cent have even calculated their carbon footprint - a good starting point for any organisation looking to cut its emissions.

Indeed, many managers likely have no idea how much their energy use is costing. The research found that 81 per cent of the public sector managers don't directly pay for their energy use, while 67 per cent never see a bill for it.

That said, 70 per cent of the polled mangers said making IT greener is important to them, while 30 per cent have started using video conferencing and 28 per cent use IT to offer flexible working in a bid to cut carbon output from travel.

Neil Crockett, head of public sector at Cisco in the UK, said the report suggests the public sector is taking the right steps to greener IT, but more work remains.

"ICT has the power to transform the way the public sector delivers its services, helping to improve interagency communication and meet the Government's carbon reduction targets," he added in a statement.

Commenting on the survey results, Steve Palmer, president of SOCITM, noted that going green can also cut costs and improve services. "The economic downturn we face provides an enormous opportunity for maximising the potential that ICT has for delivering high quality, low carbon services," he said in a statement.

"Green ICT initiatives cannot just reduce travel, enable flexible working and reduce energy consumption; they can also improve the quality and delivery of frontline services," he added.

Palmer called on the public sector to get better at sharing information about going green, as the survey found just 16 per cent were sharing best practices and the knowledge they'd learned. "What is needed is greater understanding and collaboration between organisations to put these innovations into practice," he said.

Click here for our top 10 green IT tips.

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Green targets or spending cuts

Targeting major reductions in carbon emissions from data centres within the public sector and proposed cuts in public spending go together like chalk and cheese. Everyone should now know that there are easy fixes that can help towards more efficient data centre operations such as fitting blanking plates, hot aisle/cold aisle separation, increasing server inlet air temperatures etc. However, from the survey results I doubt if these well publicised actions are that well known - let alone acted upon! To help you out on365 has come up with 15 quick ways to improving data centre efficiency- http://www.on365.co.uk/Data_Centre_Optimisation/15_Quick_Fixes_to_Improve_Data_Centre_Efficiency.aspx. These tips are only the starting point. To make major inroads into reducing the carbon footprint will require significant investment. Whether this is at the physical infrastructure level, such as complete and physical separation of hot and cold air, the use of free-cooling coils in chillers or at the computational level in terms of server/SAN virtualisation, a government operated private cloud – money, and plenty of it, will be required. Just the management of data centre efficiency will require the government committing to big sums. Global commercial organisations such as Google, HP, IBM and eBay have published some very aggressive PUE results (down as low as 1.1) for some of their data centres. OK these might not be their most important or business critical sites but the numbers are a target. They show that it can be done. Some involve radical measures like locating the DC in Iceland or not bothering with UPS protection but they all took investment. Obviously Government has little choice but to cut public spending. I guess it will come down to which is the most important, the treasuries debt management targets or the Governments green targets.

By Ip_chrissmitheaf on Tuesday Jul 7

1 people out of 1 found this comment useful.

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