Standard proposed for measuring data center efficiency
- 16 July, 2010 09:33
- Comments
A group of organizations led by The Green Grid has recommended a standard way for data centers to measure their Power Usage Effectiveness, aiming to bring consistency to the metric and make it easier for different facilities to compare their results.
PUE was developed by The Green Grid as a way for operators to measure the efficiency of their data centers. It compares the total energy consumed by a data center to the amount of energy that actually reaches the IT equipment, showing how much is lost to other equipment such as cooling systems.
While PUE has won support, there has not been a standard way to measure it, making it difficult for data centers to compare their efficiency. Earlier this year, The Green Grid got together with the U.S. Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star Program, the Uptime Institute, the U.S. Building Council and others to define a common way for calculating PUE.
On Thursday they released their recommendations for dedicated data center facilities. They plan to release a second version in the future for data centers that are part of a mixed-use facility such as an office building.
"This guidance is meant to help the industry have a common understanding of energy efficiency metrics that can generate dialogue to improve data center efficiencies and reduce energy consumption," the group said in a white paper.
They defined four ways of measuring PUE in an effort to encompass a wide range of data centers, including those that don't yet have the capability to accurately measure all their energy consumption.
PUE Category 0 is the lowest level, measuring demand based on peak loads during a 12-month period. The measurement is taken at the utility meter. While the metric offers only a snapshot, omitting the potential impact of fluctuating loads, taking consistent Category 0 measurements can still help operators track their energy efficiency, the group said.
The most accurate level, PUE Category 3, measures energy consumption using a 12-month total reading taken at the point of connection of the IT devices to the electrical system. It's the most accurate method, the group says, because it removes any impact from losses related to electrical distribution components and non-IT equipment.
"The goal is to recommend a consistent and repeatable measurement strategy that allows data center operators to monitor and improve the energy efficiency of their facility," according to the white paper. "A consistent measurement approach will also facilitate communication of PUE among data center owners and operators."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- Optimizing Data Quality in the Enterprise - How to Tackle Your Bad Information
- Business Intelligence Best Practices for Dashboard Design
- Shedding Light on Backup and Availability Challenges in Virtual Environments
- Key Considerations in Modernising Your Backup and Deduplication Solutions
- Best Practices for Implementing a Data Warehouse on the Oracle Exadata Database Machine
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Phones are distractions during catch-ups
-
Google's Sidewiki lets people post comments about Web pages
-
The Big Six: The CIO Executive Council’s Frameworks for IT Value and Leadership
This overview of six of the CIO Executive Council’s most important pieces of intellectual capital represents the thought leadership of literally hundreds of global CIOs spanning over half a decade. It is intended to convey the Council’s position on the current and future CIO role and the value that IT should be creating for the enterprise. We hope that it offers the IT community an intriguing and comprehensive roadmap for continued success. -
Endpoint Buyers Guide
It takes more than antivirus to stop today’s advanced threats. Protecting corporate assets requires a complete security solution that includes anti-malware, host-based intrusion prevention (HIPS), web protection, patch assessment, application and device control, network access control, data loss prevention, firewall and other capabilities. In short, you need an endpoint protection solution. We examine the top vendors according to market share and industry analysis: Kaspersky Lab, McAfee, Sophos, Symantec and Trend Micro. Each vendor’s solutions are evaluated according to: Product features and capabilities, Effectiveness, Performance, Usability, Data protection, and Technical support. -
IDC Case Study - EMC IT Increasing Efficiency, Reducing Costs, and Optimising IT with Data Deduplication
This IDC Buyers Case Study: Explores the benefits EMC realised from the use of a range of EMC's own backup and recovery solutions that leverage deduplication technology; Identifies the unique backup challenges for different computing environments and how data deduplication can address these environments; Highlight EMC's legacy backup environment and the changes EMC made as part of a transformation process to increase efficiency, reduce cost and optimise IT - as part of its journey to the private cloud.
-
Cliffsnotes Finding a Job on the Web Australian Edition
-
Garageband for Dummies
-
Classification Analysis of DNA Microarray Data
-
Expert One-on-one J2EE Development Without EJB
-
Beginning Database Design Solutions
-
World of Emily Dickinson, the
-
CCNA
-
Professional Sharepoint 2010 Development
-
Professional Web Apis with Php








Comments
Post new comment