EPA’s Data Center Efficiency Report: Can we really save 55% of the energy a data center requires today?
by Angela Miller
I’ve been reading the US Evironmental Protection Agency’s (US EPA) latest report to Congress on Server and Data Center Efficiency released earlier this week. This comprehensive analysis of the current trends in energy usage and potential future demands for servers and data centers in the United States projects that in the next five years the demand could double – from an estimated 60 billion Kwh/yr to over 120. In five years.

In spite of all the other science that precedes it, this study will likely be the impetus for the US to consider stricter rules on energy efficiency for information technology devices. The legislation passed yesterday regarding renewable electricity and new taxes on oil heralds other changes likely to come from the US Congress. Regardless of the whims of Washington, the EPA report confirms the need for companies large and small to substantively change IT strategies.
Consider the report’s discussion of power density issues:
Increasing power density can lead to a situation in which companies are forced to build new data centers not because they are running out of floor space but because they need power and cooling beyond what can be provided in their existing data centers. This situation has driven much of the recent interest in energy-efficiency improvements for data centers. If the power consumed (and resulting heat generated) in data centers can be reduced through energy-efficiency measures, the existing infrastructure can continue to meet cooling and power needs, and costly investments in new data centers can be deferred. (USEPA, 2007)
The report highlights simple changes that IT Departments could implement today without significant investment beyond operational changes – many of which echo strategies discussed in previous ecology.IT posts:
• Consolidation
• Retirement of Unused Legacy Equipment
• Enabling current power management tools on all servers and storage devices
• Replacement of equipment with newer, more energy efficient devices through attrition over time
• Shifting of equipment for optimal airflow management
In their estimate, these simple operational changes could result in a 20% energy savings relative to current trends. A 20% change right to the company’s bottom line with primarily operational strategies.
Over the next few weeks we will investigate some of the proposed “best-practice†and “state-of-the-art†changes proposed in the EPA study. They assert that by implementing these strategies we could save up to 55% of the current energy forecast.
Dig deeper on the issues:
I relied on the following sites for analysis in support of this post:
US EPA Final Report on Server and Data Center Energy Efficiency
New York Times Article on Energy Bill