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    Cutting the carbon footprint of IT

    How to deliver measurable savings an IBM study with the support of Defra

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    Contents

    Section 1 Foreword Page 3

    Assessing and reducing carbon footprint and financial

    waste a fresh, best-practice, fact-based approach.

    Section 2 A strategy for change Page 6

    The Green Transformational Programme and business

    value; changing the way we work; people, processes,

    and infrastructure.

    Section 3 Measuring and improving the carbon footprint Page 12

    Saving power, saving money; measuring output and

    the faceplate trap; doing the sums a clear approach

    to power measurement and prediction; architectural

    patterns and energy efficiency ratings; the IT landscape

    availability, survivability, and compliance; financial

    considerations carbon charge-back; upstream,

    downstream, and recycling.

    Section 4 And from here Page 21

    Protecting assets through environmental, social and

    ethical risk assessment; good behaviour is good business.

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    3

    Experience shows that wasted energy

    can cost tens of millions of pounds:

    environmental awareness goes with

    a keen eye for the bottom line.

    Combined with the financial impact

    of energy efficiency, in the current

    political climate, the responsible use

    of energy has serious implications for

    an organisations public image.

    This paper explores how an

    organisation can sustainably reduce

    its carbon footprint and its costs at the

    same time. It is a practical study,

    drawn from real examples and actual

    observations, and is amongst the

    most detailed investigation into the

    management of workplace IT systems

    ever undertaken. It is presented in

    order that public sector organisations

    and businesses alike can share and

    use this best-practice, fact-based

    method to assess and reduce both

    carbon footprint and financial waste.

    IBMs UK and Ireland Technical

    Consultancy Group (TCG) would

    like to thank the Department for

    Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs

    (Defra) for their support, insights

    and in providing access to data

    and Defra sites.

    Section 1 Foreword

    Energy efficiency is an increasingly important part of business efficiency.

    One of the biggest challenges facing a modern organisation is how to

    leverage the immense benefits of effective IT systems while keeping their

    energy consumption to a minimum.

    The IBM team developed its method

    for determining the carbon footprint by

    studying information, computer, and

    workplace technologies. It analysed

    in detail the way work patterns were

    affected by IT, to produce a detailed

    and effective solution which can readily

    be applied to both public and private

    sector organisations.

    The search for efficiency

    Ecological responsibility and business

    responsibility are two sides of the same

    coin. Both reject waste and profligacy;

    both embrace the notion of responsible

    stewardship and investment of assets

    in order to reap greater returns in the

    long term, and whilst theres no

    question that environmental and

    economic concerns frequently clash,

    innovation can advance both agendas

    at the same time.

    Businesses are already looking at

    ways to cut waste in their data centres,

    but there has been little examination

    of the electrical consumption and

    carbon footprint of the distributed IT

    systems and services environment,

    and how organisations could bring

    about sustainable improvements.

    I believe that the CIO of

    any organisation has a duty

    to ensure that distributed

    IT systems and services

    are as energy efficient as

    possible. This is never easy.

    Based on an in-depth study,

    the tools and methods

    this paper proposes have

    the potential to help by

    providing CIOs with a good

    starting point to develop

    and deliver an effectiveenergy efficiency strategy.

    Chris Chant, CIO,

    Department for Environment,

    Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)

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    However, this is where organisations

    with large distributed infrastructures

    (geographically dispersed offices for

    fixed location workers or a base for

    a mobile workforce) need to look for

    ways to reduce their carbon emissions

    not just in offices, but wherever

    people work. For a modern workforce,

    this can mean at home, in hotels, or

    even in the car or on a train wherever

    workplace equipment draws energy

    or uses resources.

    In this paper, we go beyond traditional

    IT items such as PC, data server and

    file and printer server to consider

    additional items such as photo

    copiers, fax machines, power packs

    for mobile devices, air conditioning

    units and communications equipment

    such as hubs and routers. Many

    of these devices use more energy

    than people expect, and use it in

    unexpected ways its not just how

    long they are switched on, but the

    way in which people use them.

    Establishing how energy-hungry

    they are, and how their appetite can

    be reduced without affecting their

    performance, makes both ecological

    and business sense. In wasting energy

    inefficient equipment and inefficient

    ways of working are wasting money

    significant amounts of it.

    Leading the way

    Seeking a more energy efficient

    workplace is a win-win proposition

    that can reduce costs and reduce

    environmental damage as well.

    Some of the most innovative and

    promising ideas for reducing waste

    and managing natural resources come

    from the business community. This

    paper suggests how those good

    ideas can be applied in practice.

    By considering the environmental

    impact of their endeavours and

    adopting clean technologies and

    environmentally sound practices,

    businesses can save money and

    reduce their impact on the planet.

    Drivers for this new behaviour include:

    Government climate change

    directives the Climate Change

    Bill, for example, aims to set in law

    a target to reduce greenhouse

    gas emissions by 60% by 2050

    Consumers increasingly desire

    green products

    Organisations corporate social

    responsibility objectives

    New opportunities for improved

    resource management, financial

    savings and other indirect paybacks

    for example, IBM has saved more

    than $100 million since 1998 by

    conserving energy.

    There is a clear business

    necessity to reduce carbon

    emissions and through

    technology and our ability

    to innovate, we can

    achieve this. I am excited

    by this work which presents

    organisations with a practical

    opportunity to help reduce

    waste and to extend todays

    finite energy resources.

    Larry Hirst, General Manager,

    IBM (UK)

    4

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    Companies now compete in an

    increasingly green market,

    and therefore need to position

    themselves appropriately.

    These issues are important today,

    and they will be still more important

    tomorrow. Energy prices are rising,

    and clients are reporting that energy

    supplies are now under stress.

    Carbon taxes are on the political

    agenda: businesses increasingly

    need to demonstrate environmental

    responsibility, both to fulfil their legal

    and social obligations, and to enhance

    the brand and corporate image. CEOs

    are concerned about corporate image,

    CFOs about the cost of energy, and

    CIOs about the environmental impact

    of IT systems.

    These are not just matters for the

    traditional power hungry manufacturing

    industries. They are important for all

    organisations running significant

    IT infrastructures.

    Through this study, we have

    developed a programme for change

    a way in which organisations can

    meet these challenges. In Section 2,

    we outline a strategy by which

    carbon impact and financial waste

    can be reduced, and in Section 3

    we set out a method of determining

    the actual carbon footprint of the

    distributed office environment, and

    measuring the actual savings made

    through various reduction methods.

    A few figures

    Combined emissions from

    PCs, servers, cooling, local

    area networks, telephones

    and mobiles total 2% of

    global carbon emissions

    the same as aviation

    (Source: Gartner)

    One tonne of CO2= 509 cubic

    metres, enough gas to fill almost

    six double decker buses

    The UKs annual 559 million

    tonnes output of CO2would

    cover the City of London to a

    depth of nearly 2.5 kilometres

    For every person in the UK

    9.3 tonnes of CO2is produced

    annually enough to fill

    nearly two Olympic sized

    swimming pools.

    (Source: Energy Saving Trust)

    5

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    6

    So what is the strategy for achieving

    environmental change?

    How can an organisation start the

    process of green transformation and

    achieve the resulting benefits of

    efficiency and cost savings? What

    is the method that a project team

    could follow? The study team has

    developed a Green Transformational

    Programme (GTP) which is the first

    step in the strategy for change.

    It shows how environmental

    awareness can be converted

    into real business value.

    At the start of the programme,

    members of the organisations

    nominated leadership team

    including those tasked with Corporate

    Social Responsibility gather in a

    workshop to identify and prioritise

    areas where improvements and

    innovations can be made.

    Section 2 A strategy for change

    The diagram on page 7 shows 17

    green components which might be

    considered in a typical organisation.

    Other organisations will have different

    examples, but a similar component

    map structure will help to identify the

    individual components so that the

    leadership team can focus on them

    as the most profitable areas to achieve

    carbon improvements.

    The expertise, information and

    techniques described later in this

    paper will help to inform the discussion.

    Decisions on the strategic importance

    and performance of the various

    components however, come from the

    workshop participants themselves.

    Since the entire IT leadership

    participates, the conclusions they

    reach will have wide acceptance

    within the organisation.

    By considering each individual

    business area the green areas on

    the map and comparing the amount

    of energy committed to it with the

    benefit it provides to the organisations

    operations, it will be possible to

    highlight areas where energy savings

    could be made to the greatest

    possible advantage.

    The potential solutions that the team

    identify can then be prioritised,

    analysed for impact, and integrated

    into an overall action plan. By the end

    of the workshop, the team will have

    set out priorities for reform that can

    be understood and embraced by the

    organisations whole leadership team.

    Step 1 strategy workshop

    Agree the organisational scope

    of the study, for example line

    of business department,

    or a geographical area

    Agree the boundary to be

    investigated; the upstream

    and downstream parameters

    Agree the scope of technology

    process and the extent

    of peoples behaviour to

    be investigated.

    Step 2 planning workshop

    Using the component map,

    agree where IT effort and

    spend is being directed

    Agree which components are

    core, critical, differentiating

    and non-essential to IT

    Correlate the component map

    to the organisational target

    Consider whether to adopt

    carbon charge-back model and

    maturity level of implementation

    Baseline build model and

    report through a programme

    of continuous improvement.

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    7

    measurable, and so the teams

    proposals need to be tested by looking

    at working patterns and taking actual

    measurements of energy usage in the

    specific areas they have selected.

    Savings in power use can be measured

    from electricity meters and individual

    devices, but reduced travel, reduced

    wastage, and increased recycling

    also need to be considered. These

    factors may all form part of the final

    technique for measuring the success

    of the new green strategy which will

    emerge from the priorities drawn up

    in the workshop.

    Business

    enablement

    service and

    solution

    strategy

    Business

    technology

    strategy

    Development

    strategy

    Deployment

    strategy

    Enterprise

    architecture

    Portfolio

    management

    Technology

    innovation

    Business

    resilience

    strategy

    Regulatory

    compliance

    strategy

    Integrated

    risk strategy

    Knowledge

    management

    strategy

    Information

    management

    strategy

    IT support

    strategy

    Services

    delivery

    strategy

    Business

    performance

    planning

    Demand

    management

    Communications

    planning

    Financial

    management

    Business

    technology

    performance

    and value

    Human resources

    management

    Continuous

    business

    operations

    Regulatory

    compliance

    Integrated risk

    management

    Information

    architecture

    Information

    resource

    management

    Knowledge

    resource

    management

    Operations

    planning

    Infrastructure

    resource

    planning

    Support

    services

    planning

    Services and

    solutions

    architecture

    Services and

    solutionslifecycle

    planning

    Release

    planning

    Changeplanning

    Support services

    management

    Infrastructure

    resourcemanagement

    Infrastructure

    operations

    Service and

    solution

    maintenance

    Service

    and solution

    creation

    Release

    implementation

    Change

    implementation

    Regulatory

    compliance

    remediation

    Business

    resilience

    remediation

    Knowledge

    capture and

    availability

    Data and content

    management

    IT services

    and solution

    marketing

    Business

    performance

    management

    IT financial

    management

    Staff

    administration

    and development

    Supplier

    and contract

    administration

    Plan and manage Build Run

    Strategy

    Tactics

    Operations

    IT customer

    relationship

    management

    IT business

    management

    Business

    resilience

    Information

    and knowledge

    management

    Service

    and solution

    development

    Service

    and solution

    deployment

    Service

    delivery and

    support

    Directing

    Controlling

    Executing

    Security,

    privacy and data

    protection

    However, the GTP is a positive

    source of business benefits rather

    than a support function. Deciding

    on these potential areas for change

    is only the first step in the process.

    The aim is to produce savings in

    energy consumption and spending

    that are clear, identifiable, and

    Component business map for the business of running IT

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    8

    Changing the way we work

    In drawing up a strategy, the team

    will have to look at the way the

    organisation works at its employees,

    its premises, and how office and

    workplace equipment is used.

    It is people who determine how much

    power an item of equipment uses, and

    how big its carbon footprint is. Its not

    just how they use it whether they use

    equipment in active or standby mode,

    or whether they turn it off when it is not

    in use its also whereand whenthey

    use it.

    Is it being used at home? In the office?

    During peak hours? All these factors

    affect the amount of electricity and

    other resources consumed, and the

    consequential carbon output.

    Organisations have to consider smart

    working satellite offices or working

    from home, for instance and shared

    services, and how they will affect

    the carbon footprint. As we shall see,

    the calculations can be complicated.

    What is needed to minimise energy

    use, save costs, and reduce the

    impact on the environment is nothing

    less than the transformation of each

    and every work space.

    When is workplace

    transformation considered?

    Workplace transformation is

    typically considered:

    To reinforce a culture change

    programme

    To support a business process

    transformation programme

    To anticipate the growth or

    contraction of the organisation

    To introduce non-territorial

    working

    When real estate is old and due

    for significant refurbishment

    To reduce property costs.

    Roles Skills

    Performance measures

    Management practices

    Core business processes

    Support processes

    Physical environment

    Virtual environment

    Business strategy

    Processes Infrastructure

    People

    Strategic scope

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    9

    The environmental strategy, like the

    business strategy, involves people,

    processes and infrastructure. There

    needs to be change in all three areas

    to bring about green improvements.

    Changing habits

    If it is people who are largely

    responsible for the way that energy

    is used or wasted in the working

    environment, it follows that one of

    the biggest challenges is to change

    the way that people work. However,

    organisations can encourage and

    facilitate change by providing a

    suitable IT infrastructure.

    One option is to treat carbon

    usage in the same way that financial

    expenditure is often treated that is,

    to allocate CO2targets to department

    heads, with rewards for underspending

    and corresponding charges for over-

    use. Such a policy will encourage

    senior staff to pay greater attention

    to energy consumption and they can

    then spread this attitude through their

    departments by making energy efficient

    working easier and more convenient.

    For example, the provision of a

    video-conference room, will encourage

    more virtual meetings, cutting the

    carbon cost of unnecessary travel.

    There also needs to be a feedback

    mechanism so that users can see

    how they are performing against their

    targets. This could be built in to any

    metering system.

    Of course, employees have a part to

    play too. As part of this organisation-

    wide drive to meet carbon targets,

    they need to change the way they

    use devices.

    Despite recent improvements, on the

    whole office equipment is still not

    designed for energy efficiency. The

    chip architecture of desktops, for

    instance, has been described as

    similar to driving a car by putting

    your foot hard on the accelerator

    and lifting the clutch to control the

    forward speed. But the way devices

    are used can have a big effect on

    overall energy consumption.

    Screen savers. A PC may use

    60W when running a screen saver

    programme, compared to 40W

    when the normal Windows desktop

    is displayed, and just 1-2W in

    hibernate mode.

    The lights are on but no-ones at

    home. Many PCs are left on after

    the users have left the office. Even

    in hibernate mode a PC will draw

    some power, especially if any of the

    attached devices, such as an optical

    mouse, have LEDs. Office-bay

    printers are left switched on when

    the bay is unoccupied.

    Press the button. At many desks

    power blocks are left on when they

    have an obvious on/off switch.

    Over-provision. Multiple

    photocopiers may be left on

    when only one is needed.

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    Real estate gains

    The most effective way of using real

    estate to reduce the carbon footprint

    is to concentrate the workforce and

    operations into the minimum amount

    of space they need to do their work

    efficiently and effectively. Every

    square metre of space saved

    reduces the environmental impact

    of the organisation. However, this has

    to be carefully balanced against the

    operational delivery model adopted

    by the organisation concerned.

    Saving space assuming the building

    itself is already efficient means

    working flexibly by sharing desks,

    centralising print hubs, introducing

    bookable formal meeting space and

    free-access informal space, and

    providing the IT infrastructure to

    make home working attractive.

    This is a significant cultural change for

    an organisation and the impact on staff

    should not be underestimated but if

    the whole programme is carried out

    alongside the installation of more

    energy efficient IT and support

    equipment, it can generate significant

    financial and environmental benefits.

    Optimising real estate and IT devices

    at the same time offers real reductions

    in the carbon footprint. For real estate

    the most effective way of achieving

    gains is to concentrate operations

    into a smaller space; for workplace

    devices, radical rethinking of the

    standard operating and support

    environment will drive out

    electrical inefficiencies.

    IT provision is always an important

    element of a workplace transformation

    project. End users need confidence

    that they will have the IT they need to

    be able to do their work properly, and

    organisations have to consider the

    overall cost of provision.

    With shared desks, for instance, there

    is always a decision to be made

    between the provision of a desktop

    machine like the one a fixed worker

    might have, a docking station for a

    laptop, or the more flexible but more

    expensive option of combining both.

    Experience now reveals that the

    docking station solution frequently

    results in the provision of several

    different stations to accommodate

    different laptops. The default solution

    is to provide a thin client computer

    on the desk, so that laptop users

    can plug into Ethernet links, keyboard

    and screens as appropriate.

    Cultural change is vital to achieving

    transformation success and can only

    be achieved by working with staff

    and ensuring they feel involved in

    the process. The new systems and

    workplace have to address their

    needs. The diagram below illustrates

    a commonly used approach.

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    11

    The overall picture

    Most important, however, is

    reaching a view of the overall energy

    consumption of the workplace

    environment. This involves looking

    beyond the energy consumed by the

    office equipment itself, and to the

    energy consumed in its manufacture,

    as well as what the eventual carbon

    cost of its disposal will be.

    These calculations are complex, and

    IBM believes no-one has looked at

    them in detail before but making

    them accurately is an essential part

    of devising an effective strategy.

    The rest of this paper concentrates

    on ways to do just that. The IBM

    study team devised a technique,

    detailed in Section 3, which specifically

    aims to reach an authoritative view

    of how much energy is consumed,

    and how savings can be made.

    Start-up phase Implementation phase Post-programme

    Survey/interviews Implementation best practices Post occupancy surveys

    Benefits, iden tific ation and analysis Benefits tr acking Workshop feedback

    Occupancy tracking Lessons learnt Handover

    Maturity profiling Risk and issue management

    Policies and principles Interdependency management

    Systems gap analysis and design Knowledge sharing workshop

    System implementation

    Programme management tools

    Cultural transformation roadmap

    It enables an organisation not only to

    save energy, but to know how much

    energy has been saved and also

    to see how those savings can be

    reflected in improved profitability.

    Through measurement of these

    savings, any organisation can easily

    see not only the implications for its

    corporate social responsibility and its

    public image, but also the impact on

    its bottom line.

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    Saving power, saving money

    The results of the research proved that

    making some simple improvements

    can make an immediate impact. By

    simply switching off equipment at

    the end of the day or when it is not in

    use has a significant effect on overall

    consumption; so does choosing energy

    efficient equipment, such as flat-screen

    monitors, which can draw up to

    55% less power than conventional

    CRT models.

    Operating adjustments are also

    important a reduction of around 10%

    in screen brightness/contrast might

    save 3 watts power consumption

    without degrading the quality of display.

    Up to a third of printers and photo

    copiers are under-utilised, and

    non-critical or sensitive equipment

    is often kept in air-conditioned

    rooms unnecessarily.

    For example, Defra has rationalised

    printer provision, with the use of

    multi-function devices and software

    to provide automatic switch-offs.

    Such changes, along with PC

    operating systems that manage power

    consumption more efficiently, are worth

    considering as potential low-cost and

    simple ways to reduce expense and

    improve the carbon footprint.

    Section 3 Measuring and improving

    the carbon footprint

    But any energy-saving programme

    needs to go far beyond these quick,

    easy, and low cost gains. To achieve

    sustainable improvements it is

    necessary as a first step to find

    ways of measuring how much

    power is actually being used in

    the distributed IT systems.

    The faceplate trap

    To understand how to reduce energy

    consumption, it is also necessary to

    consider the question How much

    power do individual devices use?

    and the answers can be surprising.

    The last few years have seen

    tremendous improvements in the

    power, functionality, and versatility

    of office equipment, leading to better

    all-round performance whether in

    an office building or out on the

    road. Manufacturers are increasingly

    considering energy efficiency in

    the design process in order to gain

    competitive advantage, meet new legal

    requirements, and cut energy costs.

    Designers of systems which use

    office equipment must now carefully

    consider how best to take advantage

    of these advances.

    However, despite these advances,

    much of the equipment on the market

    still does not conform to any energy

    efficiency standard.

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    13

    Most equipment will be stamped with

    a faceplate detailing some of the

    electrical characteristics of the device.

    However, basing an assessment of

    power consumption and carbon

    footprint simply on a reading of the

    wattage rating printed on the faceplate

    is not satisfactory.

    The study found that more specific

    observations were required; simply

    taking the plate wattage rating of

    the device as a guide to power

    consumption and CO2footprint

    can be misleading, for example:

    The plate rating often indicates the

    maximum amount drawn but for

    several classes of device, the

    actual power varied considerably

    from that figure

    Technical specifications often detail

    the power output, not the power

    input, which could be higher.

    A spot reading of the electricity

    being drawn by the device will not

    confirm the amount used over a

    longer period

    Even when a device is apparently not

    switched on, or a charger is plugged

    in with no device attached to it, they

    can still use electricity.

    Accurate measurements are possible,

    although difficult, to carry out. But the

    point is that individual measurements

    are in any case not enough all they

    provide is a snapshot of a single

    device. The crucial technique is

    building on the snapshot to reach a

    view of overall consumption across

    the IT system.

    Doing the sums

    A clear approach to power

    measurement and prediction is

    needed for an accurate picture of

    how much energy is used by IT

    components. There are two key factors

    which affect the energy consumption

    of any device:

    The actual power consumption

    of the specific devices;

    How the devices are used.

    The plate values (maximum power

    consumption values) found on most

    devices do not relate directly to the

    actual amount of power they consume

    in everyday use. There does not

    appear to be a simple way of

    estimating actual consumption for

    example one PC may use 60% of the

    plate value in normal use, while

    another may use as little as 5%.

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    14

    The ideal answer is to take actual

    measurements from any devices

    which occur in significant volume.

    Since this is impractical, the solution

    is to measure a few, and use them

    as a model from which to estimate

    overall consumption.

    Doing that, however, is complicated by

    the fact that the way devices are used

    will depend on the job they are

    carrying out, and upon who is using

    them. It is not possible to assume that

    one device will have the same power

    consumption as a precisely similar

    device being used elsewhere.

    Variables such as how long the

    machine is idle; which hours it is

    operational; how often the fan is

    running; how often the disk is spinning

    and what type of printing is being

    carried out all affect the machines

    consumption levels.

    It is not only a matter of what the

    power consumption may be when

    the machine is in its various modes,

    but also of what proportion of time

    it spends in each one.

    The way the working environment is

    organised in the office itself, or

    among staff who work outside also

    affects the amount of power used.

    For example, does the organisation

    use centralised network printers,

    distributed desktop printers, or both?

    A final consideration involves remote

    or non-office working. This saves

    money for an organisation by reducing

    the amount of space required, and

    also creates environmental benefits

    such as reducing the number of car

    journeys to work.

    In a large organisation which may have

    tens of thousands of people working in

    it, it is going to take too long and cost

    too much to gather all the information

    for each device. It is quicker, more

    cost-effective, and probably more

    accurate to reach a conclusion based

    on testing a sample of the equipment.

    Architectural patterns

    Energy efficiency ratings

    Householders have long used energy

    efficiency ratings (EERs) to help them

    make decisions about what electrical

    goods to buy for the home. Decisions

    about IT equipment need to be made

    in much the same way. In particular,

    it would be useful to apply EER

    assessments to the architectural

    patterns of an IT system the way that

    hardware and software components

    are structured, and how each

    component interacts with the others.

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    So what would the benefits be?

    Energy efficiency ratings would help

    to determine the long term energy

    costs of running and maintaining

    an IT system

    They would help to decide the

    best overall solution to a given

    business problem.

    These benefits could be ongoing.

    For instance, guidance about energy

    efficiency for use during the outline

    and design of a solution could

    also be used during maintenance

    of existing systems to reduce

    energy consumption.

    The principle that the polluter pays

    is gaining widespread acceptance.

    Determining how much carbon is

    being consumed by an end-user

    organisation with a given IT system

    would make it possible to levy

    charges based on the carbon

    profile, thus linking business activity

    with the environmental cost of the

    IT supporting it.

    Greening the IT landscape

    We have seen that the usage of a

    device and the operational processes,

    practices and procedures operated

    by an organisation will all affect the

    carbon footprint of the distributed

    IT infrastructure.

    Whilst there have been many

    discussions on sustainability and the

    impetus on organisations to have low

    carbon footprint, there is little common

    acknowledgement concerning what

    is good practice as regards green

    requirements for a organisations

    standard operating and support

    environment? Indeed, there has been

    little, if any, new thinking in this area

    up to now.

    Availability and disaster survivability

    Traditional means to improve system

    availability frequently depend on

    standby systems which will take over

    in the event of a failure. Frequently

    these systems are idle or used for

    workloads that can be sacrificed if

    a failure occurs. Possible ways of

    making them more efficient include:

    Not having idle backup machines

    which are switched on but not

    conducting useful work. If the

    recovery times allow for it, these

    backup machines should be

    switched off. Otherwise, they

    should be fully utilised

    Having a higher ratio of active

    machines to standbys. Most modern

    availability solutions are capable

    of supporting N+1 type availability

    configurations. Generally, there is

    no reason why a single backup

    could not be used for eight or more

    active machines

    Use spare capacity in existing

    production machines to take on

    production services if and when

    another machine fails. Modern

    partitioning techniques allow for

    capacity to be allocated to virtual

    machines that can take on these

    workloads from failed systems.

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    Compliance

    Standards compliance is a key

    attribute of many systems, allowing

    interoperability and many other

    non-functional requirements to work.

    The organisation needs a set of

    environmental standards that carry

    equal weight with the other IT

    standards being used. Compliance

    with these standards is then a

    key attribute of the system and

    its components.

    Portability

    Portability is closely related to

    standards compliance. If applications

    conform to the appropriate standards

    then they can easily be moved from

    platform to platform as business needs

    change. In the green future, this

    becomes an even more powerful tool.

    A new system with dramatically better

    green credentials which supports the

    appropriate standards could take over

    workloads from less efficient systems

    to take full advantage of the advances.

    Choice of IT standards should be

    made with such a possibility in mind.

    Scalability

    Traditionally scalability has been

    achieved either by scaling-up (adding

    more capability inside the box) or

    scaling-out (adding additional

    instances of capability alongside the

    box). Both of these consume extra

    power and have a larger carbon

    footprint. Emerging technology

    solutions, particularly in the area of

    accelerators, allow for large amounts

    of additional systems capability to

    be added without massive extra

    power consumption. In fact, some

    of these emerging technology

    systems provide significant savings

    in power consumption.

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    Financial considerations

    Paying the bill carbon charge-back

    Increasingly, government, businesses,

    and the general public are agreeing

    that the polluter should pay, and

    are starting to look at carbon dioxide

    and environmental damage as

    chargeable commodities.

    Installed IT architectures may have

    an identifiable carbon cost, and

    departments and even individuals

    could be given carbon budgets

    to meet.

    One possibility is that an end-user

    organisation could be allocated a

    certain quota of carbon tokens

    its carbon budget, to be spent as the

    computing services of an organisation

    consume power and therefore create

    an associated CO2output.

    Such a mechanism would allow

    a organisations consumption of

    IT resources to be linked directly

    with their environmental impact,

    and would justify investment in the

    IT infrastructure which would improve

    the efficiency and thus the carbon

    footprint of the IT architecture.

    Understand consumption of distributed IT assets

    Augmenting with data centre

    consumption and power density factors

    Monitoring of

    shared infrastructure

    Monitoring

    by transaction

    Metering

    Approximating

    Carbon charge-back maturity model

    Four phases

    Reaching a satisfactory carbon

    charge-back system could be

    carried out in four stages:

    Phase 1: Understanding consumption

    of distributed IT assets

    A power consumption profile is drawn

    up from a handful of samples taken

    from various classes of device around

    the distributed infrastructure. This

    approach is simple and flexible, but

    since it does not include data centre

    devices, it remains incomplete. It also

    depends on estimates of which user

    uses what proportion of shared

    IT resources.

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    Phase 2: Augmenting with data centre

    consumption and power density factors

    Data Centre devices and other factors

    including Heating, Ventilation and

    Air Conditioning (HVAC) are also

    significant, along with lighting,

    monitoring systems and other

    facilities infrastructure.

    Up to now, the most common

    approach in the industry up to now

    has been to define capacity by

    averaging the theoretical maximum

    consumption across the whole

    installation and arriving at a power

    density rating measured in watts per

    square metre. However, because of

    the inaccuracy of name plate figures,

    a more satisfactory result might be

    gained by multiplying those figures

    by 0.67, to reflect an approximation

    of their power consumption in actual

    use. This approach has all of the

    advantages of Phase One and

    considerably improves accuracy.

    Phase 3: Monitoring of shared infrastructure

    Within the data centre, more powerful

    servers, grid technology and

    virtualisation technology mean that it

    is now possible for many end-user

    organisations to share a physical

    device or collection of devices. Using

    existing tools, it is possible to monitor

    the consumption of system resources

    by specified applications on particular

    devices. From this, the carbon charge-

    back can be determined either on an

    average user basis (assumption based)

    or on a by use basis (metered).

    Phase 4: Monitoring by transaction

    Where shared infrastructure and

    applications are involved, the

    measurement becomes more

    complex. Gathering the transaction

    volume and other data will allow

    apportioning of power consumption

    by organisation or user.

    Different devices in the infrastructure

    have different ongoing downstream

    costs, such as replacement parts,

    printer cartridges, toner, and other

    consumables. In this phase of the

    carbon charge-back process, the

    basic power consumption of different

    categories of device would be

    multiplied by a given factor to reflect

    these costs.

    While some assume that

    cutting carbon dioxide

    emissions costs businesses

    money, we have found just

    the opposite. Addressing

    climate change makes

    business sense. We have

    saved more than $100 million

    since 1998 by conserving

    energy. When you consider

    the significant environmental

    benefits also achieved,

    cutting emissions is awin-win proposition.

    Wayne Balta, Vice President

    Corporate Environmental Affairs

    and Product Safety, IBM

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    The wider picture

    Given the current climate of

    public opinion, any significant IT

    programme must take into account

    corporate responsibility and

    environmental legislation.

    Every device purchased has an

    environmental cost, from sourcing

    the raw materials, transportation,

    assembly, distribution, commissioning,

    operational use and the disposal and

    salvaging of components for recycling.

    Those people within an organisation

    who are responsible for corporate

    social affairs should be involved in

    assessing the delicate balance that

    exists between this cost and the value

    of the device. Striking that balance

    means looking at the wider picture.

    Upstream

    There are many different factors

    which make it difficult to determine

    exactly how much energy is used

    in the manufacture and distribution

    of specific items of workplace

    equipment. This includes the energy

    required to create such components

    as chips, memory, and disc drives,

    the energy required during assembly,

    and the energy used in the

    distribution process.

    Information is available from several

    non-governmental organisations on the

    amount of energy consumed in the

    manufacture of a device. In determining

    the current carbon footprint of a

    distributed IT infrastructure, the

    simplest solution is to accept whats

    there as it is. You cannot change

    what has already happened.

    and downstream

    The downstream effect includes

    the energy used in running the IT

    infrastructure and keeping it cool.

    There is also the question raised by

    new legislation and by environmental

    good practice of its possible,

    eventual recycling and reuse.

    In the past landfills have been used

    for obsolete IT equipment, but these

    are a major source of pollution.

    The legal position

    EU regulations ban the sale of any new

    electrical and electronic equipment

    containing more than agreed levels of

    lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent

    chromium, polybrominated biphenyl

    (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl

    ether (PBDE) flame retardants.

    Manufacturers need to understand

    these regulations to ensure that their

    products fully comply and project

    teams should be aware of the law.

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    Watching your waste

    Analysts predict that as many as

    10 million computers and also

    most other office equipment such

    as printers, photocopiers, network

    routers and fax machines could be

    discarded over the next two years in

    the UK alone. These will all have to

    be recycled, posing a problem for

    businesses looking to meet the latest

    recycling regulations.

    The continued cycle of new software

    introduction means that many existing

    systems may be unable to operate

    the latest features and functions.

    Disposing of such equipment

    further complicates any cost and

    value exercise.

    As the general public becomes

    increasingly aware of the importance

    of the whole-life ecological impact of

    equipment, so IT departments will

    have to refresh their purchasing

    strategy to take account of the carbon

    cost of manufacture and disposal of

    individual items the upstream and

    downstream costs.

    The ethical option

    Companies can meet their corporate

    social responsibility requirements,

    obey the latest regulations, and also

    maintain a positive public profile in an

    increasingly environment-conscious

    world by avoiding dumping obsolete

    equipment in landfill sites.

    One option is to give redundant

    hardware to a charity that can arrange

    for it to be recycled or reused.

    Computer Aid International, for

    example, refurbishes PCs for use

    in the developing world.

    Reuse is a practical solution because

    a computer is rarely obsolete after the

    three- or four-year lifespan of a typical

    business desktop upgrade cycle.

    Extending its life by a further three

    years not only provides an extra

    6,000 hours of usage to people who

    would not otherwise have access

    to IT, but also effectively halves its

    environmental footprint.

    Charities are working to ensure that

    the security of corporate information

    is not jeopardised by recycling. For

    instance, Computer Aid International

    says it employs market-leading,

    data-destruction software.

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    Good behaviour is good business

    Currently, there is no UK legislation

    directly relating to the carbon footprint

    of computer equipment, but the

    Governments draft Climate Change

    Bill, following the Stern Report, aims

    to cut CO2emissions by 26%-30%

    by 2020, on the way to 60% cuts by

    2050. These cuts will have the force

    of law, and will be accompanied

    by five-yearly limits on emissions.

    The European Union, meanwhile,

    has agreed to reduce the 1990 level

    of CO2emissions by 20% by 2020.

    Such measures are not aimed

    specifically at computing equipment

    but there is no doubt that new

    restrictions and requirements covering

    all energy-using devices will be on

    the way. It is more economical and

    efficient to treat such regulations

    proactively in the planning, designing,

    and implementation phases of IT

    solutions and other office and

    workplace equipment, rather than

    waiting to react to them once they

    are announced.

    Sustainability starts with protecting

    assets through environmental,

    social and ethical risk assessment.

    But preparing for such a major change

    in attitude requires a credible and

    persuasive green sustainability

    strategy. It needs clear objectives

    and reliable information about how

    the strategy is working, along with

    transparency and accountability.

    There is a strong business case for

    change, but it needs to be made

    clearly, allowing fair comparisons to

    be drawn. Reliable principles built on

    agreed priorities will provide this; and

    over time, government-led guidelines

    may offer a structured, fact-based

    approach. Organisations will be

    committed to systematic sustainability

    improvements and detailed reporting

    about them.

    On the surface, the question What is

    the carbon footprint of a distributed

    IT infrastructure? appears to be very

    simple to answer but, as we have

    seen, there are real complexities to

    be considered.

    As global financial markets

    respond to the changes

    in energy supply and

    environmental conditions

    which now shape all

    organisations, this work

    demonstrates IBMs

    proactive leadership in

    developing solutions and

    options to address this

    critical challenge.

    Andrew Spencer, IBM Vice President,

    Global Technology Servicesfor Financial Markets

    Section 4 And from here

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    The inconvenient truth is that we are spending more on

    energy than we realised; that we are spending it in ways

    that we dont fully understand; and that we are going to

    have to do better.

    But by tackling the green issues of carbon footprint

    and environmental footprint, we can achieve real

    business benefits, cut costs, and increase value.

    Making the change will be a journey but theinconvenient truth is a convenient starting point.

    Taking a green approach towards IT issues fits in with the growing

    awareness of the problems of climate change and sustainability. It is in

    line with public opinion, and improves the public profile of the organisation.

    And by minimising waste, it has positive financial implications. We can

    be rewarded for being good.

    Good behaviour, in fact, is good business.

    IBM is committed to environmental leadership in all of its business

    activities. For further information see ibm.com/ibm/environment/

    This paper offers a data-based assessment of the issue; it provides

    insights, approaches and techniques which should enable an organisation

    to reach an answer with confidence.

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    By tackling the green issues of carbon footprint

    and environmental footprint, we can achieve real

    business benefits.

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    Contact

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    Chief Technology Officer

    Green Technologies

    IBM UK Ltd

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