SOURCE: IBM
June 11, 2008 06:00 ET
IBM Project Big Green Tackles Global Energy Crisis
New "Mini-IBM" Modular Data Centers Deliver Up to 50 Percent Energy Savings
ARMONK, NY--(Marketwire - June 11, 2008) - IBM (NYSE: IBM) today said it would expand its
global efforts to deliver greater energy efficiency to businesses facing
skyrocketing energy costs, environmental concerns and corporate
sustainability requirements. The company introduced new services,
technologies and financing to help enterprises bridge the gap between the
mandate for Chief Information Officers (CIOs) to build "greener" technology
infrastructures that can meet growing business requirements and the desire
of Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) to realize rapid financial benefits from
such investments.
Today's announcement comes one year after IBM launched Project Big Green and
committed $1 billion to deliver technologies that help clients dramatically
increase the level of energy efficiency in their data centers. Data centers
house computer servers and equipment that are consuming increasingly larger
amounts of energy as demand for computing power grows worldwide. In the
past year, IBM has engaged with more than 2,000 clients to deliver
hardware, software and services technologies that have helped them reduce
data center energy consumption and cut energy costs by as much as 40
percent.
IBM Modular Data Centers -- Scaling for the long term while slashing energy
costs today
The second phase of Project Big Green intends to drive greater advancements
in energy efficiencies by making data centers more flexible in matching
information technology (IT) needs to capital and operating costs. The data
center environment is going through dramatic change. According to the EPA,
energy costs for these environments are doubling every five years and the
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air/Conditioning Engineers
expects technology densities to increase by 20 times in this decade. With
roughly 60 percent of the capital costs and 50 percent of the operational
costs of running a data center being energy related, the ability to design,
construct and activate a highly energy efficient data center has become a
business imperative.
To meet that imperative for both the CIO and CFO, IBM is today introducing
modular, energy-efficient data center designs available anywhere in the
world. Designed to power businesses ranging from large global enterprises
to small organizations in remote areas, the new modular data centers can
reduce energy consumption by as much as 50 percent. They include:
-- Enterprise Modular Data Center (EMDC) - an enterprise class data
center "shrink-wrapped" and standardized from 5,000 square feet up to
20,000 square feet. This approach enables clients to bring new data centers
online three-to-six months sooner than a custom designed version. By
building in smaller, standardized modules, clients can scale the starting
data center capacity by up to 12 times while matching their capital and
operational costs to their IT needs over time. This approach allows the
customers to defer up to 40 percent of the capital expense and 50 percent
of the operational expense until the capacity is required. Each EMDC is
designed to achieve the world's highest ratings for energy leadership, as
determined by the Green Grid, an industry group focused on advancing energy
efficiency for data centers and business compute ecosystems.
-- Portable Modular Data Center (PMDC) - provides a fully functional data
center in a pod-like form with a complete physical infrastructure including
power and cooling systems and remote monitoring. It also has all the
elements of the secure operating environments found in traditional "raised-
floor" data centers, including protection from fire, smoke, humidity,
condensation and temperature changes. The PMDC can be shipped and deployed
into any environment and can support multiple technology vendors and
multiple systems in an industry standard rack environment.
-- High Density Zone (HDZ) - a modular system that provides incremental
cooling and power capability in existing data centers that are tapped out
of capacity. The HDZ system can be swapped into an existing data center
without disrupting current operations and can provide up to 35 percent cost
savings compared to retrofitting an existing data center.
The modular data centers introduced today are essentially miniature
versions of IBM's renowned data centers, mimicking the power and energy
efficiency of facilities that serve many of the world's largest
enterprises. The capability to increase computing capacity while
simultaneously reducing power consumption is an antidote to a pressing
business need. CIOs must now plan data center support of global enterprises
as energy costs rise to all-time highs. IBM's Project Big Green helps them
design and deploy energy efficient modular data centers while providing
CFOs the savings which can dramatically reduce energy bills.
"Since we announced IBM's Project Big Green a year ago, we've engaged with
thousands of businesses, governments and educational institutions around
the world to help them address critical energy challenges in their data
centers," said Mike Daniels, senior vice-president and group executive, IBM
Global Technology Services. "In the second phase of Big Green, we're
unveiling the most advanced green technologies and services to help clients
become much more efficient in how they consume and pay for energy, not only
in their data centers, but across all of their operations."
New Technologies - IBM Research Paves Way for Green Data Centers
IBM scientists have developed a method to cool computer chips that have
circuits and components stacked on top of each other with tiny rivers of
water, an advance that promises to significantly reduce energy consumed by
data centers. Earlier this month, IBM Researchers, in collaboration with
the Fraunhofer Institute in Berlin, demonstrated a prototype that
integrates the cooling system into the three dimensional (3-D) chips by
piping water directly between each layer in the stack. These so-called 3-D
chip stacks -- which take chips and memory devices that traditionally sit
side-by-side on a silicon wafer and stacks them together on top of one
another -- presents one of the most promising approaches to enhancing chip
performance beyond its predicted limits, while simultaneously reducing the
energy consumed by data centers.
IBM storage systems researchers are also studying ways to measure power
utilization on the IT workload to help customers with data center planning.
Ultimately, the scientists expect to integrate these new technologies into
storage management tools for real-time power consumption management.
In addition, IBM service researchers are now applying Component Business
Modeling (CBM) to the environmental space, particularly with regard to
reducing carbon footprint. CBM allows organizations to identify
opportunities for improvement and innovation by regrouping their activities
into a manageable number of modular business components. This enables
flexibility and provides for a clarified focus on the core capabilities
needed to run the business and drive business strategy. Organizations
interested in carbon management use CBM to identify areas of the business
with high carbon impact levels and opportunity for change. For example, in
a CBM map there is an "IT Systems and Operations" component with high
potential to reduce carbon footprint through IBM's green data center
approach. CBM maps are also pre-populated with performance metrics and
industry benchmarks that can be easily used to analyze business processes
where waste can be reduced.
New Products and Services for the Green Data Center
IBM announced new software today for its industry leading storage
virtualization system, the IBM SAN Volume Controller (SVC) 4.3. The new SVC
4.3 software can significantly improve the flexibility and responsiveness
of IT infrastructures by creating consolidated, virtual pools of
information across the enterprise, enabling IT departments to centrally
manage resources and respond more quickly to client needs. Storage
virtualization technology can also reduce requirements for additional
physical storage hardware systems, which can ultimately reduce overall
energy usage in the data center.
In addition, IBM is announcing three new energy efficient services to help
clients with data center storage and virtualization needs. They include:
-- IBM Server Optimization & Integration Services for VMware server
virtualization -- a comprehensive set of services that can help clients
increase the flexibility of their server infrastructure, achieve
utilization rates up to 60 percent, and significantly reduce the number of
servers they manage. The service can help reduce energy costs by up to 30
percent and reduce total cost of ownership by up to 50 percent.
-- IBM Storage Optimization and Integration Services for process
excellence -- a service that addresses challenges in the enterprise
including skill transfer, change management, lack of uniformity and the
impact of resource churn. This service builds on the storage infrastructure
power consumption and carbon footprint reporting capability which is part
of the new IBM Novus Storage Enterprise Resource Planner (SERP) v4.3.1
release.
-- IBM Softek z/OS Dataset Mobility Facility (zDMF) -- a service that
enables clients to move data at the dataset level with minimal disruption
to application availability. This automated approach provides businesses
greater flexibility, faster adoption of better-performing, larger capacity
disk volumes, and newer, more energy-efficient storage systems.
Financing to Go Green
IBM Global Financing announced today a customized, all inclusive financial
package for energy efficient IT services, infrastructure and business
transformation projects. Such financing helps preserve client cash flow for
the entire scope of a client's green data center project, including
hardware, software, services and maintenance with a single, comprehensive
package. By financing green data center projects, IBM Global Financing can
administer all the clients' current and future IT investments, even paying
off current financing contracts with other providers.
The New Enterprise Data Center -- Green to the Core
Earlier this year, IBM introduced a model for the new enterprise data
center -- an evolutionary, highly efficient, dynamic infrastructure that
addresses the business challenges global clients face today. The IBM vision
is backed by deep technical capabilities, unmatched skills and a clear
roadmap with assessments and solutions clients can act on today. Using an
open approach, with support from more than a dozen ecosystem partners, this
new framework allows clients to leverage emerging technologies to address
growing business challenges and helps them position their companies to be
more competitive.
Project Big Green is a critical part of IBM's new enterprise data center
strategy which focuses on best practices in virtualization, green IT,
service management, security and cloud computing. The new enterprise data
center offers potentially dramatic improvements in IT performance and
energy efficiency, and helps enable rapid deployment of new IT services to
support business growth.
Last month, IBM announced "Software for a Greener
World," a broad set of software capabilities to help businesses achieve
their green goals and optimize infrastructure, workloads and people for
energy efficiency. The capabilities span the IBM software portfolio from
Tivoli, WebSphere, Rational, Information Management and Lotus. For example,
IBM Software can enable clients to manage energy consumption in the data
center and beyond, deliver energy efficient enterprise applications and SOA
environments, optimize business processes for energy efficiency, report on
energy and carbon to document compliance, efficiently manage information
storage and processing to drive down energy costs, and reduce carbon
emissions and the need for travel by increasing collaboration across
geographies.
In support of IBM's Data Center Family capabilities and customer
requirements for end-to-end solutions, IBM continues to expand their data
center open architecture through relationships with industry leading global
power and cooling technology providers including Anixter Inc., Eaton,
Emerson Network Power, GE Digital Energy, and APC by Schneider Electric.
In addition to the energy efficient technology solutions announced today,
IBM is focused on several areas related to energy and the environment,
including sustainable supply chains, solar technology, carbon management
services, advanced water management, intelligent utility networks and
intelligent transportation systems. For more information, visit
www.ibm.com/green.
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