Face facts, WE are responsible for the “unseasonal” weather

I lost count of the number of people who commented on the unseasonal weather whilst out going about my business this weekend. Here, in Sheffield, we had about 15cm of snow fall over the course of Friday and Saturday. This was described as being “dreadful” and “foul” by some of my fellow shoppers, who were panic buying all the milk, bread and meat they could get their hands on. I have to say, I made the most of it and had a great time playing with my dog Pippa. She particularly enjoyed me throwing snowballs over drifts more than a metre deep in our local park where she would land submerged in soft powdery snow. Here’s an action shot.

clip_image002

Joking aside, there is a reason for this unseasonal weather. Prof Sir John Beddington, the UK government's chief scientist is quoted in the news today saying that there is already enough CO2 in the atmosphere for there to be more floods and droughts over the next 25 years. Because the planet’s climate system operates slowly, there are long delays in CO2 level rises in the atmosphere. This means weather patterns we’re seeing now are as a result of CO2 emissions emitted more than 20 years ago. Governments across the globe are just not meeting Green House Gas reduction targets. We need to accept the fact that we will see more and more weather anomalies over the next 20 to 30 years.

"The [current] variation we are seeing in temperature or rainfall is double the rate of the average. That suggests that we are going to have more droughts, we are going to have more floods, we are going to have more sea surges and we are going to have more storms.”

Do something NOW for your children and your grandchildren

We should all be making an effort to reduce our carbon footprint. In our personal lives we have a responsibility to our children and our children’s children. Whether it is recycling, driving less or driving a smaller car, flying less or just consuming less stuff. We basically need to be less selfish and less consuming.

But what about at work?

Does your organization take measures to reduce its environmental impact? In our office, we recycle pretty much everything now. We underwent an office refurbishment project a couple of years ago, and in the process, energy saving lighting was installed and carpets made from recycled bottles was laid. We also use our own power management solution for shutting PCs down at the end of the day and at weekends. This is a very simple and effective way of reducing CO2. After all, why should a device be left on when no one is using it, you wouldn’t do that at home. Sadly some people just don’t care when they are not paying the bills and for their own convenience they chose to leave their PC on. Well guess what? There is a way to switch devices off and it won’t inconvenience users.

Read about power management with NightWatchman Enterprise

You, as an employee have the power to influence and make a positive difference to our future.

Michelle Hazelton | Product Manager, 1E

1E Blogs

How to reduce the number of servers in datacenters and remote branches

Imagine a world (or a datacenter for that matter) that runs your business as securely and safely as before – but much more efficiently and with fewer servers in it.

According to IDC, server revenue across EMEA showed a second successive quarterly decline and an 11% year over year drop. So businesses are not buying servers like they used to, expecting to just make do with what they have got.

One question is what are the servers that they have got actually doing? Research from 1E and the Alliance to Save Energy shows that at least 15% of servers are not doing any useful work, or in other words, the tasks for which they were bought and provisioned. With the average annual cost of running a physical server for a year at $4400, and a virtualized one at $1000[i], that’s a lot of money tied up in assets that are providing no business value. What’s more, servers use about 60% of their maximum power while doing nothing at all, say the analysts at Pike Research.[ii]

The other question is what would you do if you had the ability to reduce the number of branch servers you have, without compromising your business and increasing IT efficiency?

For many businesses, having to run a datacenter with fewer servers is a reality – but it isn’t as daunting as it might sound. Here are two scenarios where having fewer servers has saved our customers time, money and increased their IT efficiency:

  • In a recent project, one of our customers found that 22% of 68 servers were wasting over 80% energy. The company now stands to make double the energy savings – with every watt of energy saved, another watt in cooling is saved concurrently. By introducing datacentre infrastructure management (DCIM) efficiency tools into your datacenter you could switch off as many as one in six of your servers, which is an attractive proposition when you can’t buy more.
  • At one customer site, 1E was able to reduce the number of branch servers by 98% – from 6,000 distribution points to just 200 (that’s a 30-fold ROI in CAPEX and OPEX). Another compelling reason to start thinking about – and not be afraid of – operating with fewer servers.
To find out more about how you could transform your organization and operate with fewer servers, please visit:

  • Our Nomad Enterprise page, which shows you how you can remove the need for branch servers or desk side visits – reducing your existing server footprint and administrative overhead.
  • Our NightWatchman Server Edition page, which measures how much power is being used by your servers and identifies which are being inefficient, suggesting good candidates for re-purposing, power management or decommissioning.


[i] “Server energy and efficiency report”, 1E and the Alliance to Save Energy, 2009.
[ii] “PC and Server Power Management Software”, Pike Research, 2011. 

What does driving an Electric Car have in common with PC power management?

Two electric realities collide
 
I've just taken delivery of a new car, and it got me thinking that there are a many similarities between my choices in deciding to buy this car and the choices around picking a PC power management solution.

The car I've bought is the brand new Vauxhall Ampera – a re-bodied variant of the Chevrolet Volt. My new car has a unique selling point as it's the first 'extended range electric vehicle'. It always runs on electricity, and you plug it in to the mains to charge up, but unlike all other electric vehicles it also has an on-board petrol driven generator.

The battery has a 40-50 mile range, and if you only travel that far before getting back home to recharge then it uses no petrol at all, however if you need to go further, the generator kicks in and provides electricity to keep you going for another 300 miles (or as far as you need to since you can fill up at any gas station to go further).

Since my daily commute is approximately a 50-mile round trip, I will be able to drive the majority of that on battery and only need to fill up very infrequently. Couple that with the fact that I'll be paying no road tax or congestion charges as well as much lower insurance premiums, my running costs for owning a vehicle have dropped dramatically. Also, my need to travel any distance at any time is not limited in any way. The best upshot of all is that now I'll only be paying about 10% of the cost of my previous monthly petrol bill in electricity costs.
 
That’s where the similarity to PC power management comes in. Availability management is a key efficiency measure within PC power management. With a comprehensive PC power management tool like NightWatchman Enterprise from 1E, less downtime is caused by reboots patching and ensuring the health of PCs out of hours, which means productivity remains unaffected. You can benefit from a more efficient use of resources (electricity) without having to compromise on user experience.

The main reason I chose an electric car was to reduce running costs and to insure against the continued rising cost of petrol. As a nice side effect, I'm also helping to reduce my own personal carbon footprint. Since centrally-produced electricity produces far less carbon than the amount I would have emitted from a normal internal combustion engine, and having switched to a 'green' electricity tariff, my footprint is further offset.
 
It's similar with PC power management. Although many organizations invest in PC power management to lower IT costs, there are very real carbon emissions savings to be made. Typically, an organization can achieve a 40% reduction in PC power costs, around 380 kWh per PC per year preventing 586 pounds of CO2 per user per year from being emitted into the atmosphere.[i].

There were cheaper all-electric cars on the market (such as the Nissan Leaf), but since the Ampera completely removes any range anxiety, it  is worth the extra money, plus it's a higher spec, more luxurious car.
 
When selecting a PC power management product, there are many options to choose from, including premium, cheap, or even free. While the free options are still preferable to nothing at all, they are missing a number of key capabilities. Sometimes free is too cheap, as we like to say. If you’re interested in reading more about this, please take a look at the article on page 6 of latest issue of V1EWPOINT.

Another reason it makes sense to buy an electric vehicle now is the fact that the UK government is paying £5000 towards it – an incentive to get people into electric vehicles. Many utility companies like Pacific Gas and Electric and Manitoba Hydro, two 1E customers, also offer rebates or incentives for using PC power management, sometimes covering the entire cost of the software investment.
 
I love being able to see the savings I have made on the in-car dashboard. Accurate reporting is a fundamental part of power management. Getting the energy consumption levels right is the principal underlying factor to prove my savings, and the same is true of NightWatchman, with the most accurate energy consumption reporting providing the best results, since CO2 emissions and monetary savings are a function of kWh consumed.

Buying the Ampera has proved the financial savings and efficiencies that I can make as well as how I am reducing my carbon footprint. I could have chosen any number of electric cars but its extended range which gives ability to let me drive wherever, whenever gives me freedom and options. Good PC power management will do much the same – on a larger scale. Anyone can switch off a computer, but automated PC power management tools make sure that the user can use it whenever they need to, that IT can patch it as needed, it remains healthy and energy savings are reported accurately.


[i] Ovum, Selecting a PC Power Management Solution Vendor, December 2011, Rhonda Ascierto.

…and for a hat-trick of 1E updates, NightWatchman Server Edition 2.9 is here


Our development teams have been busy!

To bring us to a 1E hat-trick of product announcements this week, we are today releasing NightWatchman Server Edition 2.9, hot on the heels of having been referenced in a section of Gartner’s most recent DCIM Cool Vendors report.

In the report, the analysts state that “by 2015, Datacenter Infrastructure Management (DCIM) tools and processes will grow from 5% penetration in 2011 to 60%.” The Gartner analyst team recommended that IT executives should “make DCIM a mandatory requirement for all major data center builds and refurbishments” and “architect the integration of IT operations management, building management systems and DCIM.” Further they believe “DCIM is likely to be self-funding; the cost of the tools is likely to be offset by the savings in power costs that DCIM helps enable.”

We're really pleased to be included in the report after first being named a Cool Vendor in IT Support in 2008 by Gartner [ii].

To date, 1E has helped more than 1,600 customers make $800m savings energy costs with our suite of energy management solutions, including flagship PC Power Management solution NightWatchman Enterprise. This has led to a reduction in CO2 emissions of 5.8 million tonnes – the equivalent emissions of one and a half coal-fired power stations in one year.
 
This latest release of NightWatchman Server Edition features improvements in reporting, server life-cycle management and support for Microsoft SQL Server 2012.
 
These are busy and exciting times here at 1E towers. Without giving too much away, you can expect more from the NightWatchman Server Edition team soon. For now, please visit the NightWatchman Server Edition page or contact us to hear more about version 2.9.

US Dept of State is a 2012 InfoWorld superstar of sustainable IT

We're delighted to say that 1E customer the US Department of State, is recognised by InfoWorld as a 2012 superstar of sustainable IT!

Federal mandates assess agencies on a variety of sustainability areas, including energy management. Historically, the Department mandated that all 88,986 desktops at 468 worldwide sites – comprised of domestic facilities, embassies, consulates, and passport agencies – be kept on 24/7 to ensure regular security scanning, maintenance, and patching. To comply with federal mandates and support the Department’s Greening Diplomacy Initiative, the Department launched an agency-wide initiative to eliminate power waste across 100 percent of its workstation computers.

With projected savings worldwide of several million dollars per year when fully implemented, the power management initiative now eliminates more than 21,000 metric tons of carbon emissions per year. The Department also automates patch deployment and network scanning during off hours to save system administrator time.
 
NightWatchman® Enterprise helped the Department automate the shutdown of unused workstations while maintaining security and minimizing disruption. Integrating seamlessly with the Department’s Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager (ConfigMgr) platform, it also offers robust reporting capabilities that accurately report power and carbon consumption savings through a highly customized dashboard. In addition,WakeUp™ – the Wake-on-LAN feature of NightWatchman Enterprise – allows Department site workstations to be powered on for patching, scanning, health checks and software installation. These tasks can now be performed during non-business hours, minimizing impact to normal day-to-day business operations.
 
Read the InfoWorld article here: http://www.networkworld.com/slideshow/43530#slide15

Read our press release announcing the customer story here: http://www.1e.com/mediacenter/u-s-department-of-state/

For a list of all recognition awarded to 1E in the last few years, take a look at: http://www.1e.com/it-efficiency/about-1e/awards/

We’re in the running for two BusinessGreen Leader awards!

BusinessGreen has today announced the full shortlist for the annual BusinessGreen Leaders Awards and we’re pleased to say that 1E made the cut again this year!

We are shortlisted for Best Green IT project with our customer
Newham University Hospitals NHS Trust, which saved 143 metric tonnes in CO2 and of 264,552 KWh of electricity per year as a result of deploying NightWatchman Enterprise across 1,500 PCs. Read more about Newham Hospitals’ PC power management project in this article from The Guardian.

 

More good news is that our founder and CEO, Sumir Karayi has been shortlisted for the prestigious Leader of the Year award. 1E, the company that Sumir founded back in 1997 has made a significant contribution to sustainable IT and energy efficiency, such as collectively reducing our customers C02 emissions by 6.4m tonnes; that’s the equivalent emissions from 1.5 coal-fired power stations in one year, so we’re pleased to see him being recognized for his efforts!

 

The awards dinner will take place at the Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington on Wednesday 4th July – and you’ll definitely see us there!  Places are strictly limited, but if you are a customer of 1E’s and are interested in joining us, please email karolina.shaw@1E.com with no more than 50 words explaining what PC power management, server energy efficiency or 1E means to your organisation.

Europe

After a series of events in Brussels in April, is Europe now ready to commit to energy efficiency for 2020? The EU Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW) organized over 700 events across Europe to show, promote, discuss and celebrate energy efficiency and renewable energy. There were a number of events held in Brussels attracting 30,000 attendees, including a 3-day policy conference organized by the European Commission where they announced the next steps to deploy smart grids throughout Europe. The Alliance to Save Energy (ASE) and the European Alliance to Save Energy (EU-ASE) co-hosted the Energy Efficiency Global 2011 as an official EUSEW side-event. The Energy Efficiency Global Forum (EE Global), now in its fourth year, is a launching pad for ideas that change the energy landscape, bringing together high-level officials from government, business and NGOs.

EU targets

Europe 2020 is a set of five ambitious objectives – on employment, innovation, education, social inclusion and climate/energy – to be reached by 2020. The aim is for the EU to become a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy enabling EU and the Member States to deliver high levels of employment, productivity and social cohesion. Climate Action, EU action against climate change is an integrated energy and climate change policy. The goal is to set Europe on the right track towards a sustainable future with a low-carbon, energy-efficient economy by:
  • cutting greenhouse gases by 20% (30% if international agreement is reached)
  • reducing energy consumption by 20% through increased energy efficiency
  • meeting 20% of our energy needs from renewable sources.

EU not set to reach 2020 target

In 2006 the European Commission adopted an Action Plan for Energy Efficiency with the objective of controlling and reducing energy demand, and to take targeted action on consumption and supply in order to save 20% of annual consumption by 2020. Although substantial steps have been taken towards this objective (mainly in the appliances and buildings sector), recent Commission estimates suggest that the Union is actually only on course to achieve half of the desired savings. It is therefore essential for the EU to act now to get back on track to achieve the 2020 targets. The Commission has recently published a comprehensive Energy Efficiency Plan which aims to provide a holistic approach to identifying and realizing the savings potential. The Commission has outlined a two-step approach to targeting in the 2011 Energy Efficiency Plan. The first stage will assess the national energy efficiency targets and programmes set by Member States and how they might contribute to the overall EU target. In 2013, the Commission will provide an assessment of the results obtained and whether the programmes will deliver the European 20% objective. If the 2013 review shows that the overall EU target is unlikely to be achieved, then as a second stage the Commission will propose legally binding national targets for 2020.

The biggest culprits

With nearly 40% of final energy consumption being in houses, public and private offices, shops and other buildings, the greatest energy savings and energy efficiency potential can be achieved through the renovation of this existing building stock. Office buildings consume the most energy of all commercial building types. Lighting is the biggest consumer of electricity followed by office equipment.

office building energy use

There are tried and tested solutions available today to help reduce the 24% electricity consumption of office equipment.

Cut PC energy by 40%

PCs and monitors use almost three quarters the energy of all office equipment. For offices where the majority of PCs and monitors are left switch on overnight and at weekends a 40% reduction in energy consumption is achievable with PC and laptop power management. 1E

Europe’s Energy Efficiency Economy

After a series of events in Brussels in April, is Europe now ready to commit to energy efficiency for 2020? The EU Sustainable Energy Week (EUSEW) organized over 700 events across Europe to show, promote, discuss and celebrate energy efficiency and renewable energy.  There were a number of events held in Brussels attracting 30,000 attendees, including a 3-day policy conference organized by the European Commission where they announced the next steps to deploy smart grids throughout Europe. The Alliance to Save Energy (ASE) and the European Alliance to Save Energy (EU-ASE) co-hosted the Energy Efficiency Global 2011 as an official EUSEW side-event. The Energy Efficiency Global Forum (EE Global), now in its fourth year, is a launching pad for ideas that change the energy landscape, bringing together high-level officials from government, business and NGOs.

EU targets

Europe 2020 is a set of five ambitious objectives – on employment, innovation, education, social inclusion and climate/energy – to be reached by 2020.  The aim is for the EU to become a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy enabling EU and the Member States to deliver high levels of employment, productivity and social cohesion. Climate Action, EU action against climate change is an integrated energy and climate change policy. The goal is to set Europe on the right track towards a sustainable future with a low-carbon, energy-efficient economy by:
  • cutting greenhouse gases by 20% (30% if international agreement is reached)
  • reducing energy consumption by 20% through increased energy efficiency
  • meeting 20% of our energy needs from renewable sources.

EU not set to reach 2020 target

In 2006 the European Commission adopted an Action Plan for Energy Efficiency with the objective of controlling and reducing energy demand, and to take targeted action on consumption and supply in order to save 20% of annual consumption by 2020. Although substantial steps have been taken towards this objective (mainly in the appliances and buildings sector), recent Commission estimates suggest that the Union is actually only on course to achieve half of the desired savings. It is therefore essential for the EU to act now to get back on track to achieve the 2020 targets.  The Commission has recently published a comprehensive Energy Efficiency Plan which aims to provide a holistic approach to identifying and realizing the savings potential. The Commission has outlined a two-step approach to targeting in the 2011 Energy Efficiency Plan. The first stage will assess the national energy efficiency targets and programmes set by Member States and how they might contribute to the overall EU target. In 2013, the Commission will provide an assessment of the results obtained and whether the programmes will deliver the European 20% objective. If the 2013 review shows that the overall EU target is unlikely to be achieved, then as a second stage the Commission will propose legally binding national targets for 2020.

The biggest culprits

With nearly 40% of final energy consumption being in houses, public and private offices, shops and other buildings, the greatest energy savings and energy efficiency potential can be achieved through the renovation of this existing building stock. Office buildings consume the most energy of all commercial building types.  Lighting is the biggest consumer of electricity followed by office equipment.

office building energy use

There are tried and tested solutions available today to help reduce the 24% electricity consumption of office equipment.

Cut PC energy by 40%

PCs and monitors use almost three quarters the energy of all office equipment.  For offices where the majority of PCs and monitors are left switch on overnight and at weekends a 40% reduction in energy consumption is achievable with PC and laptop power management. 1E’s NightWatchman® is a scalable, proven solution enabling organizations to safely and remotely power down PC’s overnight, significantly reducing energy consumption and their impact on the environment. For example, an organization with 10,000 PCs: Achieving a 40% reduction in energy consumption from 10,000 PCs would yield savings of 1,800 tonnes of CO2 emissions, equivalent to the carbon absorbed by 42,000 trees and a total cost reduction of €353,000 per annum on electricity¹.

15% of servers are doing nothing!

Similarly, power consumption of servers can also be reduced.  NightWatchman® Server Edition is the key to making data centres and servers more efficient by reducing power consumption and redundant infrastructure and by avoiding future capital spending on new hardware. NightWatchman Server Edition measures power usage and activity across both physical and virtual Windows and UNIX / Linux servers. It provides continual analysis on how much power is being used by business applications and how much is being wasted on idle or non-productive work. Useful Work™ tracks the productivity of physical and virtual servers, reporting on how much power is being wasted by idle or unproductive processes and comparing that with power consumption by business applications. If the server is busy doing the task for which it was bought and provisioned, then it is performing useful work; if it is busy doing anything else, however important, then it is performing non-productive work. For example, a SQL Server doing SQL processing is performing useful work since users and/or applications will typically access SQL. The same server performing self-maintenance tasks such as Anti-Virus scanning, Indexing, or Back-up, although important, is not doing useful work since it is not directly serving end users. In the findings of the 1E / Alliance to Save Energy independently commissioned research, the Server Energy & Efficiency Report, it was found that up to 15% of servers are not doing anything useful and can therefore be decommissioned or repurposed. For example, an agency with 10,000 PCs would require approximately 1,000 servers. Achieving a 15% reduction in servers (150) will deliver savings of $3,053² per decommissioned server in management and administration costs, equating to an immediate savings of €457,950, and will reduce CO2 emissions by 572 tonnes.   This is equivalent to the carbon absorbed by 14,700 trees, and results in an additional cost reduction of €126,144 per annum on electricity³. Drowsy Server® dynamically controls energy consumption and costs when no useful work is being performed, while keeping the server available if it is needed, savings from using Drowsy Server can be up to 12%. A nominal 33% – 50% of a Server estate is readily capable of achieving a 12% reduction in energy consumption. From the remaining 850 servers this would yield savings of approximately 195 tonnes of CO2 emissions, equivalent to the carbon absorbed by 5,000 trees and a subsequent cost reduction of $42,889 per annum on electricity4. Employing both Useful Work and Drowsy will bring the total savings to approximately 846 tons of CO2 with a total cost reduction of $801,000 per annum in electricity, management and administration costs5.

Act now

The message is clear, energy saving through energy efficiency is the most cost effective way to enhance security of supply and at the same time to reduce emissions. This translates to doing more with what you currently have.  The technology is available today to manage the power consumption of PCs and servers, offering organizations across Europe massive saving. All of which will help contribute to Europe’s 2020 targets of cutting greenhouse gases by 20% and reducing energy consumption by 20% through increased energy efficiency. Act now before the impending doom of the 2013 legally binding targets. Speak to an IT efficiency expert today! Endnotes 1: PCs = average 84Watts 0.084kW x 24hr x 365days = 735.84kWh x 10,000 PCs = 7,358,400kWh 7,358,400kWh x 0.544kg CO2 = 4,002,970kg / 4,003 tonne CO2 (40% = 1,601 tonne CO2) 7,358,400kWh x €0.12 electricity = €883,008 (40% = €353,203) 2: $145,000M / 33,000,000 servers = $4,400 / €3,053 per server (1USD = €0.69) (In 2008, approximately $145,000M was spent on new server spending and management and administration of 33M servers, according to IDC report: “Optimizing Infrastructure and Server Management in Tough Economic Times”) 3: (400 watts/server is according to Gartner study referenced above: “U.S. Data Center Conference Focuses on How to Do More With Less,” Gartner, June 2, 2009) (energy cost for running unused servers continuously for a year + cooling cost for running unused servers continuously for a year assuming a Power Usage Effectiveness value of 2, according to EPA average PUE 2.04, 2006) Server = average 400Watts 0.4kW x 24hr x 365days = 3,504kWh x 150 servers = 525,600kWh 525,600kWh x 0.544kg CO2 = 285,926kg x 2 for PUE = 571,853kg/ 572 tonne 525,600kWh x €0.12 electricity = €63,072 x 2 for PUE = €126,144 4: Physical server = average 400Watts 0.4kW x 24hr x 365days = 3,504kWh x 850 servers = 2,978,400kWh 2,978,400kWh x 0.544kg CO2 = 1,620,250kg x 2 for PUE = 3,240,499kg/ 3,240 tonne CO2 (12% = 389 tonnes CO2 ÷ 2 for 50% of servers power managed = 194.50 tonnes CO2) 2,978,400kWh x €0.12 electricity = €357,408 x 2 for PUE = €714,816 (12% = $85,778 ÷ 2 for 50% of servers power managed = €42,889) 5: 572 + 195 = 767 tonnes CO2 €457,950 + €126,144 + $42,889 = €626,983

1E Shopping – The app store for the enterprise

Shopping empowers users to get the software and services they need when they need them. This video demonstrates the simplicity and power of Shopping by showing how users can search for and request software without helpdesk intervention.