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/v3-uk/news/1998476/major-powers-agree-datacentre-energy-metrics
06 Apr 2010, Dave Neal , V3
Organisations from Europe, the US and Japan have reached an accord on the measurement of energy efficiency, giving datacentre operators a better understanding of how to improve efficiency at their own sites.
The proposals were put forward at a meeting in February to discuss rising energy consumption at datacentres.
The meeting was attended by experts from the US Department of Energy, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the European Commission, Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan's Green IT Promotion Council and The Green Grid.
The organisations have recommended a number of standards, including The Green Grid's Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) as the base metric for energy efficiency. PUE is the measurement of total energy used divided by IT energy consumption.
Also on the agenda was improved measurement capabilities to make it easier to measure power use down to the individual server level, for example.
"The ultimate goal is to create a set of globally accepted metrics for datacentre energy efficiency. One of the first, and perhaps most important, factors to successfully achieving this aim is establishing a unity of communication," said Tom Brey, IBM representative and secretary of The Green Grid.
"The Green Grid is working with organisations around the world to develop a clear and well-defined language for the way we communicate about energy efficiency metrics, which will give us a common measuring stick for all datacentres regardless of their location.
He added that one this kind of consistency could be achieved, "real behavioural changes" in the industry could begin to take shape.
Do you agree?
Some concerns over the metric being used incorrectly
Setting a consistent measurement standard for energy efficiency within the data centre has been a long time overdue.
PUE is probably the most effective metric that can be applied to review the efficency of data centres. However, I do have some concerns about the metric being used incorrectly, whether this be intentionally or otherwise.
I believe there could potentially be some confusion over what data should be included within the PUE calculation. For example, would a build room count as part of the technical load (in which case improving the PUE) or a support load (worsening the PUE)? It is essential that strict guidelines are put in place for continuity in the mathematics to ensure that everyone is comparing apples with apples, so to speak.
While we are a step forward in clarifying how to measure an energy efficient data centre, until we have both the rules in place that govern the use of the PUE metric and the confidence that everyone is abiding by them, my concern is that differing approaches to the measurement could result in misleading data.
Adam Tamburini,
UK country manager
e-shelter
Posted by Adam Tamburini, UK country manager at e-shelter, 09 Apr 2010