Virtualization News Desk
Companies Go Green With VMware Virtualization
VMware Announced That Its Virtualization Solutions Are Saving Customers Tons In CO2 Emissions
May. 7, 2008 11:45 AM
VMware announced that its virtualization solutions are
saving customers tons in costs and CO2 emissions. Using VMware virtualization, customers
can consolidate 10 or more physical machines onto a single server and reduce
power consumption and cost by 80-90 percent. VMware customers that have moved
from a 1:1 application to server ratio to 60:1 or higher have achieved millions
of dollars in capital and operational savings.
For every server virtualized, customers can save about 7,000
kilowatt hours (kWh), or four tons of CO2 emissions, every year. VMware has
virtualized more than 6 million server workloads since 1998, resulting in an
estimated energy savings of nearly 39 Billion kWh, or roughly $4.4 billion.
This is roughly equivalent to the total energy consumption of Denmark for one
year. PCs virtualized and hosted on servers in the datacenter can also reduce
power consumption and cost by 35 percent. Hosting desktops in the datacenter
also doubles the replacement cycle of PCs or thin clients, reducing the
environmental impact associated with manufacturing new equipment.
“Most servers and desktops today are still consuming 70-80
percent of their rated power even when idle,” said Stephen Herrod, chief
technology officer, VMware. “VMware is able to deliver substantial power and
cost savings through innovative power management capabilities in our
virtualization solutions that safely power down or throttle servers when not in
use. By powering down servers and desktops during inactive periods such as
evenings or weekends, we can help customers save another 25 percent or more on
power consumption without affecting applications or users.”
Since 2006, VMware has been an active pioneer in working
with utility companies to offer incentive programs supporting virtualization
projects in datacenters. VMware works with utilities across North America
including Pacific Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, SDG&E, BC Hydro
and Austin Energy to provide customers incentives based on the amount of energy
savings achieved through data center consolidation.
Sheffield
Hallam University
Virtualizes with VMware, Cuts 269 Tons of CO2 and Saves £43,000 on Power Bills
Annually
Sheffield Hallam, one of the UK’s universities with more than
28,000 students and over 5,000 staff, required a number of new IT services to
support its user community. This led to the number of servers within the
datacenter doubling within twelve months. The building’s electricity grid could
not supply enough power to reliably support the required number of servers
within the main datacenter, and physical space was also a major issue.
Sheffield Hallam is using VMware’s datacenter virtualization
and management platform, VMware Infrastructure 3, to reduce power and cooling
requirements in the datacenter and improve the delivery of IT services. VMware
Infrastructure 3 provides the capability for automatic load balancing, business
continuity and power management and the ability to move a virtual machine
across physical machines to minimize service interruption.
“With the server farm growing towards capacity, we knew a
completely new strategy was required,” said Dave Thornley, service support
manager, Sheffield
Hallam University.
“We decided that moving to a virtual infrastructure would be the most effective
way to tackle cost management and space issues. Using VMware, we have made a huge
impact on our power bills as well as leading to major savings in the deployment
of new services to users.”
About Virtualization News DeskSYS-CON's Virtualization News Desk trawls the news sources of the world for the latest details of virtualization technologies, products, and market trends, and provides breaking news updates from the Virtualization Conference & Expo.