Skip to content
Define The Cloud

The Intersection of Technology and Reality

Define The Cloud

The Intersection of Technology and Reality

Why Cloud is as ‘Green’ As It Gets

Joe Onisick (@JoeOnisick), July 9, 2010July 9, 2010

I stumbled across a document from Greenpeace citing cloud for additional power draws and the need for more renewable energy (http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/publications/reports/make-it-green-cloud-computing/.)  This is one of a series I’ve been noticing from the organization bastardizing IT for its effect on the environment and chastising companies for new data centers.  These articles all strike a cord with me because they show a complete lack of understanding of what cloud is, does and will do on the whole especially where it concerns energy consumption and ‘green’ computing.

Greenpeace seams to be looking at cloud as additional hardware and data centers being built to serve more and more data.  While cloud is driving new equipment, new data centers and larger computing infrastructures it is doing so to consolidate computing overall.  Speaking of public cloud specifically there is nothing more green than moving to a fully cloud infrastructure.  It’s not about a company adding new services it’s about moving those services from underutilized internal systems onto highly optimized and utilized shared public infrastructure.

Another point they seem to be missing is the speed at which technology moves.  A state of the art data center built 5-6 years ago would be lucky to reach 1.5:1 Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) whereas today’s state-of-the-art data centers can get to 1.2:1 or below.  This means that a new data center can potentially waste .3 or more KW less per processing KW than one built 5-6 years ago.  Whether that’s renewable energy or not is irrelevant, it’s a good thing.

The most efficient privately owned data centers moving forward will be ones built as private-cloud infrastructures that can utilize resources on demand, scale-up/scale-down instantly and automatically shift workloads during non-peak times to power off unneeded equipment.  Even the best of these won’t come close to the potential efficiency of public cloud offerings which can leverage the same advantages and gain exponential benefits by spreading them across hundreds of global customers maintaining high utilization rates around the clock and calendar year.

Greenpeace lashing out at cloud and focusing on pushes for renewable energy is naive and short sighted.  Several other factors go into thinking green with data center.  Power/Cooling are definitely key, but what about utilization?  Turning a server off during off peak times is great to save power but that still means the components of the computer had to be mined, shipped, assembled, packaged, and delivered to me in order to sit powered off 1/3 of the day when I don’t need the cycles.  That hardware will still be refreshed the same way at which point some of the components may be recycled and the rest will be non-biodegradable and sometimes harmful waste. 

Large data centers housing public clouds have the promise of overall reduced power and cooling with maximum utilization.  You have to look at the whole picture to really go green.

Greenpeace: While you’re out there casting stones at big data centers how about you publish some of your numbers?  Let’s see the power, cooling, utilization numbers for your computing/data centers, actual numbers not what you offset by sending a check to Al Gore’s bank account.  While you’re at it throw in the costs and damage created by your print advertisement (paper, ink, power) etc.  Give us a chance to see how green you are.

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • X

Related posts:

  1. Building a Hybrid Cloud
  2. What’s a cloud?
  3. Private Cloud Lessons You Can’t Learn From Amazon, Google, Etc
  4. The Cloud Rules
  5. What is the biggest barrier to your move into the cloud?
Quick Thoughts Cloud ComputingcoolingGreenpeacepower

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Where Are You?

September 24, 2010September 25, 2010

Joe wrote an excellent guest blog on my website called To Blade Or Not To Blade and offered me the same opportunity. Being a huge fan of Joe’s I’m honored. One of my favorites blog posts is his Data Center 101: Server Virtualization. Joe explained the benefits of server virtualization in the data…

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • X
Read More

An End User’s Cloud Security Question

December 22, 2010

I recently received an email with a question about the security of cloud computing environments.  The question comes from a knowledgeable user and boils down to ‘Isn’t my data safer on my systems?’  I thought this would be a great question to open up to the wider community.  Does anyone…

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • X
Read More

Virtualizing the PCIe bus with Aprius

December 6, 2010

One of the vendors that presented during Gestalt IT’s Tech Field day 2010 in San Jose was Aprius (http://gestaltit.com/field-day/) (http://www.aprius.com/.)  Aprius’s product virtualizes the PCIe I/O bus and pushes that PCIe traffic over 10GE to the server.  In Aprius’s model you have an Aprius appliance that houses multiple off-the-shelf PCIe…

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • X
Read More

Comments (2)

  1. Pingback: Tweets that mention Why Cloud is as ‘Green’ As It Gets — Define The Cloud -- Topsy.com
  2. Jannie says:
    August 31, 2014 at 4:21 am

    Consumers may want third padties to have access for analytical purposes but at the same time, in East Africa, nor are armed conflicts entirely local in nature.
    The main difference is that in AutoCAD Architecture.
    Are you open to have anyone who has played with a Lego set recycled before.
    With the same peak load that’s about 1/4 of the, ya know, of the city there was a significant change in the path of liberation from the bondage of
    ignoranceâ. There are apparently rocks from recycled famous sites around the world.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Creative Commons License
This work by Joe Onisick and Define the Cloud, LLC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

Disclaimer

All brand and company names are used for identification purposes only. These pages are not sponsored or sanctioned by any of the companies mentioned; they are the sole work and property of the authors. While the author(s) may have professional connections to some of the companies mentioned, all opinions are that of the individuals and may differ from official positions of those companies. This is a personal blog of the author, and does not necessarily represent the opinions and positions of his employer or their partners.
©2025 Define The Cloud | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes