Posts Tagged ‘data center energy efficiency’

PUE lives on with Revised Metric

Monday, June 21st, 2010

When folks from the data center industry got together about 3-5 years ago to create a data center efficiency metric, we knew that we should tie it to the actual work being created within the data center (i.e. transactions per watt, IOPs/watt, FLOPs/watt…). However, every data center and even more so, every computer has a different work being completed and thus metric to be applied. For example, a science research computer might complete one transaction per month with a lot of network and storage traffic for that one big “transaction”, while an eBay data center might have 1,000’s of transactions per second for one computer system.

So, we came up with a compromise, knowing that all data centers and their workloads were different, yet needing something to push us as an industry to higher efficiency. Well, the holly grail of data center metrics got released….P U E. Yes, Power Usage Effectiveness. While it was only a start, and a best compromise, and we knew we needed to improve upon it or come up with something better, yet is has had perhaps more influence on energy efficiency of our data centers than any other metric or industry movement.

While improving PUE only affects the infrastructure side of the data center, not the hardware or software–leaving that always equal to 1.0 with everything else being above one–more power use the higher the PUE. Our data centers have been averaging above 2.0 (meaning that at 2.0 the infrastructure power load is equal to the server load, higher than 2 means it uses more power than the server load). A recent report from EPA of about 200 data centers last year across the US shows that we are averaging north of 2.0. Other studies show that we had been averaging around 3.0 worldwide, so we have improved greatly but still can improve so much more. While 2.0 is much better than 3.0, using 50% less power for the infrastructure, we know we should be able to achieve PUEs of at most 1.5 any where in the world, any TIER level, yet at 2.0 we are using more than double the power we need to support the non-hardware loads.

One problem with the PUE metric is that it is instantaneous since it measures power and not energy and all data center power usage fluctuates with weather and usage, and really what we care about to reduce costs is total energy use over a period of time. Energy is power use over time, while power is instantaneous. Otherwise, PUE could be measured on the coldest day of the year when all systems are running more efficiently but that is not a good gauge of annual energy use and thus costs. In all of the projects I get involved with, and all of the PUEs I quote, I use total annual energy instead of one-time power measurement, and hardware measured at the rack to account within PUE UPS, PDU and other electrical distribution losses. So, PUE should be an annual average, and that is exactly what member representatives of Green Grid, SVLG, 7×24, EPA, DOE, USGBC, ASHRAE and UpTime recommended in December of this year at a meeting in DC. I provided recommendations from the SVLG along with Chris Page, Scott Noteboom and Tim Crawford representing the SVLG at this meeting with input from Olivie Sanche of Apple and many others.

Essentially the outcome was a revised PUE metric that now measures annual usage of infrastructure and IT load, which is fantastic! Also, a little more clarity or definition on how it should be measured and what should and should not be included. (Such as on-site power generation should never reduce one’s PUE, as energy in is energy in, regardless of source.) We’ll soon see PUE and PUE subscript 1, 2 & 3. These clarify where the server load was measured (UPS output, PDU or rack). Ideally, we’d all be measuring at the rack input, but many folks do not have this meter & monitoring capability, so the compromise was to allow for some acceptance of any of these points of measurement.

Even though the location of measurement will affect the measured PUE–meaning different measuring locations will result in different PUEs for the same data center–at least it’s an improvement, and will hopefully drive folks to measure at the rack–the most accurate location of measurement. It will also drive us to think about annual usage and costs, not one time or instantaneous, another big improvement in our thoughts about all buying and operational decisions. These are the key to improving efficiency and reducing costs: long-term measurement, long-term constant improvements, and buying decisions based on long-term economic analysis.

With our new PUE metric, it should re-invigorate the PUE discussions, comparisons, and improvements. Perhaps driving us all to lower PUEs, regardless of actual resulting PUE and type of data center. After all, we all gain when we each improve.

SVLG Data Center Energy Efficiency Summit, video summary

Friday, November 20th, 2009

In a recent blog I provided a brief summary of the 2009 Data Center Energy Efficiency Summit held on October 15th at NetApp in Sunnyvale. Here is a fun, short video on YouTube of the event’s highlights. ENJOY!

The Data Center Energy Efficiency Summit is Coming Oct 15th

Monday, September 14th, 2009

That’s right folks, another summit, but oh no, not just any other summit, this is the 2009 SVLG Data Center Energy Efficiency Demonstration Program Summit, or DCEES (Data Center Energy Efficiency Summit). Originally the brain child of Ray Pfiefer, LBNL, and the CEC, the idea is simple: share energy efficiency improvements by end-users from end-users for end-users. Really simple.

As data center owners, operators and customers, we are keenly concerned about downtime of our data centers, so we tend to shy away from making upgrades unless absolutely necessary, even if it means saving money, and in some cases lots of money. And we also tend to de-value the savings estimates from our vendors as having a reduced level of credibility like clothes detergent commercials saying clothes come out cleanest with their product.

So we pull together technology partners and data center end-users to try out a new technology or process and share the results, good or bad, energy and cost savings. And then the end-user writes a brief case study showcasing the results, the results are peer reviewed or audited by a utility for a rebate, and at the summit, the end-user themselves share their experiences with this new process or product and the actual results. Again, it’s simple. And the concept is too. By sharing what we are doing, we collaborate with each other. And thru collaboration comes innovation. And thru innovation we all gain by reducing our energy use and costs. Meanwhile, the end-user that shared that latest trick is already on to the next one while the rest of the industry catches up, together we all improve.

It’s a fantastic way to reduce our costs, grow our economy, reduce our environmental footprints and implement real solutions that work. And knowing what the challenges and benefits of implementation are from our peers, we can proceed with little risk.

We all gain, we all get educated, and we all get better together. Now isn’t that a program we can all stand behind? At this year’s summit we’ll be showcasing dozens of great case studies from various end users and small and large technology companies, technologies we’ve been hearing about and thinking about. Show up at our Summit on October 15th, at our host’s facility, NetApp, in Sunnyvale, CA. It’s an all day event, full of information, presentations by data center end-users, and meet many in the industry to share ideas, collaborate, and work on that next great idea together. Register and see the full agenda at: http://dcee.svlg.org/

See you there!