Data center managers can achieve substantial electrical savings annually if they implement a list of 11 best practices, according to IT analyst company Gartner. Most of these projects could be completed with little or no budget or effort, says Gartner researcher Paul McGuckin, and these green IT efforts can get formerly unconnected corporate departments together on the same page.IT research company Gartner reported Nov. 13 that it has identified 11
relatively simple best practices for data center managers that could save
millions of kilowatt hours each budget year.
The practices include plugging holes in data center rooms, establishing
cold-air/hot-air aisles between the racks and using cool air from the outside
whenever possible.
"What is really surprising is the egregious amount of power that is wasted
each day in most data centers," Paul McGuckin, a data center research vice
president at Gartner, told me. "Virtually all data centers are using
inefficient cooling designs and systems.
"Even in a small data center, this wasted electricity amounts to more than
1 million kilowatt hours annually that could be saved with the implementation
of some best practices."
In a conventional data center, McGuckin said, anywhere from 35 to 50 percent of
the electrical energy consumed is for cooling, compared with 15 percent in
"green" data centers run according to best practices.
Click
here for Gartner's list of 11 best practices for efficient data
centers.
The most surprising find, McGuckin said, is the one
involving cold/hot aisles between server racks. The major reason for the waste
in conventional data center cooling is the unconstrained mixing of cold supply
air with hot exhaust air.
"By channeling the hot and cold air into different aisles [and using
drop-down plastic partitions to keep the air separated], a data center can save
anywhere from 20 percent to 30 percent of the annual energy draw,"
McGuckin said. "That's a huge amount."
The idea of green ITsaving bottom-line dollars and conserving power draw at
the same timeis becoming one of the best ways to get previously unconnected
divisions within enterprises, IT and facilities staff members, to talk to each
other.
"In a lot of companies, this conversation hasn't even started yet,"
McGuckin said. "In most enterprises, the IT guys never see the power bill,
and the facilities guys certainly don't know all the details of the issues the
IT guys have to solve.
"In many cases, green IT is bringing people together who don't normally
work together. To accomplish this, there usually needs to be either a project
to accomplish or an emergency situation, and this is beginning to happen."