IBM Launches New, Wide-Ranging Green IT Initiatives
In the environmentally conscious section of enterprise IT, there are
two camps: the true green-bleeding companies who innovate, and the
so-called "greenwashers."
The latter are organizations that simply hitch their wagons to others
and pretend to be green IT leaders, when in fact they are merely using
the appearance of being good environmental citizens to improve their
public image.
No matter what your opinion of venerable, bow-tied IBM
may be, the enterprise and consumer IT giant is certainly in Camp No.
1, having dedicated many millions of dollars and a great deal of
corporate effort and time into branding itself as a leader in the green
IT sector.
The latest illustration of this came June 23 at the Green & Beyond
Summit at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco's Golden
Gate Park. IBM gathered a number of business and government leaders
from around the world to detail the actions it is taking to help build
the green and sustainable data center infrastructure of the 21st
century.
"We think this is the most comprehensive effort ever undertaken by a
company intent on delivering green, energy efficient solutions to
clients around the world," Rich Lechner, IBM's vice president of energy
and environment, told eWEEK.
"Two years ago we launched Project Big Green
to help people be more efficient in their data centers," Lechner said.
"Since then we have been methodically expanding the focus, knowing we
need to optimize [all IT systems] for energy use across a broad
physical infrastructure.
"We've also been helping clients through our Smarter Planet initiative
to take advantage of the increasingly instrumented, intelligent
interconnected nature of things to allow us to fundamentally change the
way things work [to make them more efficient]."
The six new Green IT initiatives on which IBM is embarking here in mid-2009 are as follows.
New international coalition gets going: For starters, IBM has
initiated a new global industry alliance called the Green Sigma
Coalition to meter, monitor, automate and analyze smart solutions for
energy, water, waste and greenhouse gas management in data centers.
Currently all this is being done on a local basis.
The coalition will enable companies using these solutions to better
understand energy and water usage, waste, and GHG emissions across
their business operations and infrastructure, and make changes to
improve efficiency, reduce consumption and waste, and lower
environmental impact.
Charter members, in addition to IBM, are Johnson Controls, Honeywell
Building Solutions, ABB, Eaton, ESS, Cisco Systems, Siemens Building
Technologies Division and Schneider Electric.
Water-cooled supercomputer doubles as building heater: Big Blue
is building a first-of-a-kind water-cooled supercomputer that will
repurpose excess heat and use it for the offices where the
supercomputer is deployed at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Zurich (ETH) in Zurich, Switzerland.
The system, called Aquasar, is expected to decrease the carbon
footprint of the institute by up to 85 percent -- equivalent to 30 tons
of CO2 per year, compared to a similar system using conventional
fan-cooling methods. It is expected to lower overall energy consumption
in the data center by more than one-third, Lechner said.
The water-cooled supercomputer will consist of two IBM BladeCenter
servers in one rack and will have a peak performance of about 10
Teraflops.
New research into improving batteries: IBM has begun a new
long-term research initiative to create next-generation rechargeable
batteries capable of storing 10 times more energy than today's most
powerful Lithium-ion batteries. Eventually, this technology could power
smarter energy grids, support widespread use of electric cars and more.
Scientists at IBM Research's Almaden lab in San Jose, Calif., are
undertaking a multiyear research initiative around a new grid-scale,
efficient, electrical energy storage network. The team plans to explore
rechargeable Lithium/Air systems, which have the greatest energy
density of all practical battery systems and are inherently safer than
traditional Lithium/ion systems.
Flushing IT inefficiencies down the drain: San Francisco's
Public Utilities Commission is using IBM Maximo Asset Management
software to help reduce pollution in the water that surrounds the city
on three sides -- the San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
The SFPUC treats an average of 80 million to 90 million gallons of
wastewater per day during dry weather and up to 370 million gallons of
combined wastewater and storm runoff per day during the rainy season.
It is using the software to develop smarter management of the city's
1,000 miles of sewer system and three treatment facilities.
Green data center No. 100 up and running: IBM has completed
outfitting its 100th scaleable, modular data center. Located in
Columbia County, Georgia, it runs online services for the county's
agencies and citizens.
Over the past two years, Columbia County had experienced increasing
outages due to inadequate power and cooling systems, illustrating the
need to upgrade its existing data center infrastructure. The county's
population has grown 26 percent since 2000, increasing the demand for
citizen services that are available 24 hours a day via the Web.
New tools for software developers: Finally, Big Blue has
integrated its Tivoli Monitoring for Energy Management to work with
Cisco Systems' EnergyWise and Honeywell's EBI and Tridium energy
management software packages.
The new combined packages broaden the range of power consumption
information and energy optimization policies that can be managed by IBM
Energy Management to help organizations discover, optimize and report
energy usage within their data center and business infrastructure.
