Find White Papers
Home
About Us
List Your Papers
    
> APC by Schneider Electric > Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers

Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers

White Paper Published By: APC by Schneider Electric

This paper explains how to quantify the electricity savings and provides examples of methods that can greatly reduce electrical power consumption. Learn more today!



Tags : 
data center, energy efficient, apc, tco, power, cooling, total cost of ownership, electricity savings

APC by Schneider Electric
Published:  Jul 07, 2009
Type:  White Paper
Length:  15 pages

Imple menting
Energy Efficient
Data Centers

By Neil Rasmussen
White Paper #114



Executive Summary
Electricity usage costs have become an increasing fraction of the total cost of ownership
(TCO) for data centers. It is possible to dramatically reduce the electrical consumption of
typical data centers through appropriate design of the network-critical physical
infrastructure and through the design of the IT architecture. This paper explains how to
quantify the electricity savings and provides examples of methods that can greatly reduce
electrical power consumption.




©2006 American Power Conversion. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used, reproduced, photocopied, transmitted, or stored in any retrieval system of any nature, without the written permission of the copyright owner. www.apc.com Rev 2006-0 2Introduction
Electrical power usage is not a typical design criterion for data centers, nor is it effectively managed as an expense. This is true despite the fact that the electrical power costs over the life of a data center may exceed the costs of the electrical power system including the UPS, and also may exceed the cost of the IT equipment. The reasons for this situation are as follows: . The billed electrical costs come after the charges are incurred and are not clearly linked to any particular decisions or operating practices. Therefore they are viewed as inevitable. . Tools for modeling the electrical costs of data centers are not widely available and are not commonly used during data center design. . The billed electrical costs are often not within the responsibility or budget of the data center operating group. . The electrical bill for the data center may be included within a larger electrical bill and may not be available separately. . Decision makers are not provided sufficient information during planning and purchasing decisions regarding the electrical cost consequences. This paper will show that all of the above can and should be corrected, because substantial financial savings are possible for typical users. The greatest advantage can be gained in the design of new facilities, but some savings are possible for existing and evolving facilities as well. Simple no-cost decisions made in the design of a new data center can result in savings of 20- 50% of the electrical bill, and with systematic effort up to 90% of the electrical bill can be avoided. What is the cost of electrical power consumption? A typical value for the cost of electrical power is $0.12 per kW hr. Given this cost, the annual electrical cost per kW of IT load is approximately $1,000. Over the 10 year life of a typical data center this translates to approximately $10,000 per kW of load. As a general rule, approximately half of the energy used in a data center goes to the IT loads. The other half goes to the network-critical physical infrastructure (NCPI) equipment including power equipment. This means that for each kW of IT load the 10 year electricity cost is approximately $20,000. For example, a 200 kW data center would have a 10 year electricity cost of $4,000,000. This is a material cost for any organization and all IT professionals should understand where this expense is going and that it is avoidable.
©2006 American Power Conversion. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used, reproduced, photocopied, transmitted, or stored in any retrieval system of any nature, without the written permission of the copyright owner. www.apc.com Rev 2006-0 3Where does the energy go? Approximately half or less of the energy used in a data center goes to the IT loads. The other half goes to the network-critical physical infrastructure (NCPI) equipment including power equipment, cooling equipment, and lighting. Figure 1 shows the electrical power flow in a typical high availability data center. Note that all the energy consumed by the data center ends up as waste heat which is rejected outdoors into the atmosphere. Figure 1 is based on a typical data center with 2N power and N+1 cooling equipment, operating at approximately 30% of rated capacity. Figure 1 - Power flow in a typical data center Chiller 33% Humidifier 3% ... [download for more]

Browse Technology Topics

Data Center

Virtualization, Cloud Computing, Infrastructure, Design and Facilities, Power and Cooling, Green Computing  
    

Data Management

Application Integration, Analytical Applications, Business Intelligence, Configuration Management, Database Development, Data Integration, Data Mining, Data Protection, Data Quality, Data Replication, Database Security, EDI, SOAP, Service Oriented Architecture, Web Service Management, Data Warehousing  
    

Enterprise Applications

Application Integration, Application Performance Management, Best Practices, Business Activity Monitoring, Business Analytics, Business Integration, Business Intelligence, Business Management, Business Metrics, Business Process Automation, Business Process Management, Call Center Management, Call Center Software, Change Management, Corporate Governance, Customer Interaction Service, Customer Relationship Management, Customer Satisfaction, Customer Service, EBusiness, Enterprise Resource Planning, Enterprise Software, EProcurement, Extranets, Groupware Workflow, HIPAA Compliance, IP Faxing, IT Spending, Marketing Automation, Performance Testing, Product Lifecycle Management, Project Management, Return On Investment, Risk Management, Sales & Marketing Software, Sales Automation, Server Virtualization, Simulation Software, Supply Chain Management, System Management Software, Total Cost of Ownership, Video Conferencing, Voice Recognition, Voice Over IP, Workforce Management, Incentive Compensation, Spend Management, Manufacturing Execution Systems, International Computing  

Human Resource Technology

Human Resources Services, Payroll Software, Time and Attendance Software, Workforce Management Software, Financial Management, Employee Monitoring Software, Employee Training Software, Recruiting Software/Services, Employee Performance Management, ELearning, Benefits Management, Expense Management  
    

IT Career Advancement

Cisco Certification, Microsoft Certification, Linux Certification, Network Security Certification, Software Development Certification  

IT Management

Employee Performance, ITIL, Productivity, Project Management, Software Compliance, Sarbanes Oxley Compliance, Service Management, Desktop Management  
    

Knowledge Management

Collaboration, Collaborative Commerce, Contact Management, Content Delivery, Content Integration, Content Management System, Corporate Portals, Customer Experience Management, Document Management, Information Management, Intranets, Messaging, Records Management, Search And Retrieval, Search Engines, Secure Content Management, SLA  

Networking

Active Directory, Bandwidth Management, Convergence, Distributed Computing, Ethernet Networking, Fibre Channel, Gigabit Networking, Governance, Grid Computing, Infrastructure, Internetworking Hardware, Interoperability, IP Networks, IP Telephony, Local Area Networking, Load Balancing, Migration, Monitoring, Network Architecture, Network Management, Network Performance, Network Performance Management, Network Provisioning, Network Security, OLAP, Optical Networking, Quality Of Service, Remote Access, Remote Network Management, Server Hardware, Servers, Small Business Networks, TCP/IP Protocol, Test And Measurement, Traffic Management, Tunneling, Utility Computing, VPN, Wide Area Networks, Green Computing, Cloud Computing, Power and Cooling, Data Center Design and Management, Colocation and Web Hosting  
    

Platforms

AS/400, Domino, Linux, Microsoft Exchange, Oracle, PeopleSoft, SAP, Siebel, Solaris, Tivoli, Unix, Web Sphere, Windows, Windows Server  

Security

Access Control, Anti Spam, Anti Spyware, Anti Virus, Application Security, Auditing, Authentication, Biometrics, Business Continuity, Compliance, DDoS, Disaster Recovery, Email Security, Encryption, Firewalls, Hacker Detection, High Availability, Identity Management, Internet Security, Intrusion Detection, Intrusion Prevention, IPSec, Network Security Appliance, Password Management, Patch Management, Phishing, PKI, Policy Based Management, Security Management, Security Policies, Single Sign On, SSL, Secure Instant Messaging, Web Service Security, PCI Compliance, Vulnerability Management  
    

Software Development

.NET, C++, Database Development, Java, Middleware, Open Source, Software Outsourcing, Quality Assurance, Scripting, SOAP, Software Testing, Visual Basic, Web Development, Web Services, Web Service Security, XML  

Storage

Backup And Recovery, Blade Servers, Clustering, IP Storage, ISCSI, Network Attached Storage, RAID, Storage Area Networks, Storage Management, Storage Virtualization, Email Archiving, Data Deduplication  
    

Wireless

802.11, Bluetooth, CDMA, GPS, Mobile Computing, Mobile Data Systems, Mobile Workers, PDA, RFID, Smart Phones, WiFi, Wireless Application Software, Wireless Communications, Wireless Hardware, Wireless Infrastructure, Wireless Messaging, Wireless Phones, Wireless Security, Wireless Service Providers, WLAN  
Search