Datacentre

Green Grid to announce new datacentre efficiency standards

Green IT group set to unveil raft of new materials to help IT managers cut datacentre energy use

Written by Danny Bradbury and James Murray

Datacentre efficiency consortium the Green Grid has signed an agreement with the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) to create a new datacentre energy management standard.

The standard, designed to bring together energy monitoring of both IT and non-IT systems in the datacentre, will be announced at the Green Grid Technical Forum and Members’ Meeting in San Francisco this Tuesday and Wednesday. The agreement will eventually produce an interface, based on the DMTF's Web-Based Enterprise Management (WBEM) standard.

"It's really a methodology to try and get everything working together," said John Pflueger, a director at the Green Grid. "We see this as another important step at helping the end user to arrive at a better solution for energy efficiency."

The organisation will also deliver a brace of materials this week designed to help IT chiefs refine energy-saving techniques in enterprise computing. One study will offer best practices on how to bring together facilities management groups and IT teams, enabling those that pay corporate energy bills and the computing departments that use the energy to work better together.

Additionally, a Baseline Efficiency Market Study is expected outline the current state of play in datacentre energy management, while a peer reviewed version of a study by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory will focus on the effectiveness of using high-voltage DC electricity in datacentre environments. The consortium is also set to present a raft of proposals for cutting server power.

The Green Grid was unable to say how much of this work would result in immediate deliverables. The Lawrence Berkeley study was still in the final stages of preparation late last week, and Pflueger could not explain exactly what kinds of applications the interface for the DMTF work would be used for.

The Green Grid was formed in February last year. Its two primary deliverables thus far have been the Power Usage Effectiveness and Data Centre Efficiency metrics, designed to help IT managers measure the energy efficiency of datacentres.

The announcements come a week after UK IT industry trade body Intellect announced the launch of a group of ten technology companies that will contribute to its energy and the environment work programme.

The group includes senior executives from Accenture, Dell, Deloitte, Fujitsu, HP, IBM, Intel, Memset, Microsoft and Sharp, and will be chaired by Intel UK and Ireland country manager Graham Palmer.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

 

Intellect takes on climate change

Trade body Intellect has thrown its weight behind low carbon high technology 13 Feb 2008

Green Grid unveils new datacentre energy efficiency metrics

IT industry consortium says metrics for measuring datacentre efficiency are ready to become established as industry standards 24 Oct 2007

IT trade group ramps up climate change efforts

Intellect announces plans for new project to help firms measure their ICT-related emissions 13 Feb 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Learning from the credit crunch to avoid a broadband crunch

While it might be the most pressing issue de jour , the financial system isn’t the only area where government needs to... 10 Oct 2008

How careerism can warp IT procurement

Many working in IT put their career interests before those of their employer when weighing up purchasing options 10 Oct 2008

City in pressing need of skilled IT matchmakers

With the financial services sector plunging ever deeper into an M&A maelstrom, IT leaders are having their systems integration skills and due diligence expertise tested as never before 09 Oct 2008

The definitive guide to software development

Five key trends and five best practice tips to help you improve your programming capabilities 09 Oct 2008

Computing podcast - IT implications of the banking crisis, and the FSA clamps down on IT security

We discuss the effect of shotgun mergers and acquisitions on financial services IT staff, and examine the industry regulator's plan to fine directors for information security breaches 09 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job


IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

The government is using Facebook to recruit IT staff - would you apply to such an ad?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

programming codeVideo

The definitive guide to software development

Five key trends and five best practice tips to help you improve your programming capabilities 09 Oct 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - IT implications of the banking crisis, and the FSA clamps down on IT security

We discuss the effect of shotgun mergers and acquisitions on financial services IT staff, and examine the industry regulator's plan to fine directors for information security breaches 09 Oct 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Financial Services Authority buildingAnalysis

FSA threatens executives with fines

Senior management to be held accountable for security lapses at banks 09 Oct 2008

Comment

Broadband must be a spending priority

For the economic health of the nation, the government would do better to bankroll an optical fibre rollout rather than prop up profligate banks 09 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation