Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Science

IBM Commits $1B to Cure Data Center Energy Crisis

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
IBM Commits $1B to Cure Data Center Energy Crisis

IBM is launching a plan called "Project Big Green," in which it will endeavor to substantially reduce data center energy consumption and turn business and tech infrastructures into "green" data centers. The company will start investing $1 billion each year for this effort.


Listen to Your Customers, Grow Your Bottom Line.
Learn how loyal customers can be your best advocates for evangelizing your products and brand, while helping you to dramatically gain new business. Download "Customer Experience Management: Engaging Loyal Customers to Evangelize Your Brand."

IBM (NYSE: IBM) will begin investing US$1 billion per year across its businesses to dramatically increase the energy efficiency of information technology, the company announced Thursday.

As part of its "Project Big Green" plan that includes new products and services, Big Blue aims to sharply reduce data center energy consumption and to transform the world's business and public technology infrastructures into "green" data centers, the company stated.

"The data center energy crisis is inhibiting our clients' business growth as they seek to access computing power," said Mike Daniels, senior vice president of IBM Global Technology Services.

"Many data centers have now reached full capacity, limiting a firm's ability to grow and make necessary capital investments," Daniels said. "Today we are providing clients the IBM action plan to make their data centers fully utilized and energy efficient."

Power Hogs

Data centers are known for their enormous power consumption. For every dollar spent on computer hardware, roughly 50 additional cents are spent on energy, according to IDC -- and that's expected to increase to 71 cents over the next four years.

With the help of 850 energy efficiency architects from across the company, IBM plans to make these power hogs more efficient. For an average, 25,000-square foot data center, the result could be energy savings of as much as 42 percent, potentially leading to 7,439 tons of carbon emissions saved per year in the United States, officials said.

At its own data centers -- IBM currently has more than 8 million square feet of them across six continents -- IBM expects to double the computing capacity within the next three years without increasing power consumption or its carbon footprint, which is the amount of greenhouse gases emitted as a result.

Compared with doubling the size of its data centers by building new space, this will help save more than 5 billion kilowatt-hours of energy per year, officials said.

Widespread Support

"This sounds like a smart investment that will help IBM's bottom line while helping the environment as well," Bill Magavern, senior representative for Sierra Club California, told TechNewsWorld. "It's very important that the computer industry reduce its carbon footprint -- it uses a lot of electricity, and it's growing."

IBM's Project Big Green also garnered praise from the White House.

"The President's comprehensive climate change policy strongly encourages private sector leadership in increasing energy efficiency," Kristen Hellmer, a spokesperson for the Executive Office of the President's Council on Environmental Quality, told TechNewsWorld.

Who Can Be Greenest?

"As a member of the government's Climate Leaders program and EnergyStar, IBM is a great example of demonstrating a commitment to improved energy efficiency," Hellmer said. "The administration is encouraged that countless other companies are following IBM's lead."

Indeed, the move is part of a trend currently at work in the corporate world, Rob Enderle, president and principal analyst of the Enderle Group, told TechNewsWorld.

"Right now, the big competition between companies is, who can be greenest?" Enderle explained. Al Gore's film, "An Inconvenient Truth," has focused considerable attention on the environment, Enderle noted, while European countries are already heavily focused on being green.

Upgrade Assistance

"The United States is heading that way too," he added. "There are also interesting cost savings as well."

As part of its Project Big Green, IBM also announced a new set of asset recovery offerings to help clients with less energy-efficient data centers upgrade to greener technologies. The "Go Green in My Data Center" program includes free data center server disposal, disk wiping services, a Green Data Center Asset Recovery Hotline and special financing offers.

"Just as IBM helped organizations grapple with new innovations around the Internet and Linux, we will again assist clients navigate this new era of energy efficient computing," said Bill Zeitler, senior vice president of IBM Systems and Technology Group. "Relief from the energy crisis can't be achieved through incremental improvements," Zeitler said. "Bold ideas and actionable plans are needed to deal with this issue."


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Katherine Noyes


Related News Alerts

IBM Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by Katherine Noyes

Viacom v. YouTube: Finger-Pointing Turns to Mud-Slinging
March 19, 2010
Court documents in Viacom's billion-dollar lawsuit against Google suggest that both companies engaged in some shenanigans in the run-up to the long-running legal brawl -- and neither has been pulling its punches in court. "Viacom makes a strong showing for pervasive and rampant copyright infringement," said copyright attorney Raymond van Dyke. Google, however, "gives as good as it gets."
Amazon Wrangles Publishers as iBookstore Grand Opening Looms
March 19, 2010
Apple's newest charmed pair, the iPad and the iBookstore, will amble onto the publishing scene in just a couple of weeks, and Amazon is justifiably fearful. Its popular Kindle may quickly become a has-been, and it could lose hard-won ground in the e-book marketplace. What's a giant to do? Twist a few arms. If publishers bow to Amazon's latest terms, will e-book prices rise or fall?
A Tale of 20 Interns, 1 Project and 1 Fiery 'Mythical Man-Month' Debate
March 18, 2010
Did startup Ksplice disprove Brooks' Mythical Man-Month Theory with an army of student interns from MIT? What Ksplice did "is nothing like what the MMM is talking about, which is a single large monolithic project, where the time wasted getting the new help up to speed and checking their progress will often cost you the very gains you wished to see in the first place," said Slashdot blogger hairyfeet.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Free eBook: Secure Your Datacenter
Click here to download today.
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network