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Emerson: Productivity Gains Offset Energy Use

Emerson Network Power (EMR) has developed a new metric for asessing the performance gains from

When the EPA released its report on data center energy, it was widely noted that data centers used more electricity in 2006 than all the color TVs in the U.S. My immediate reaction: "Okay, but which contributes more productivity to the U.S. economy?"

The same thought has occurred to the folks at Emerson Network Power, who have released an analysis placing data centers' rising energy use in a broader context. Emerson's conclusion? The productivity gains seen inside data centers dwarf those in other sectors of the economy (like the auto industry, as noted in the above graphic).

"While there has been a significant increase in energy consumption in IT and data center environments, these increases are considerably overshadowed by dramatic gains in data center output and efficiencies over the last five years," Emerson notes, adding that "while energy consumption in data centers nearly doubled in the last five years, data center compute output increased fourteen-fold, and data center efficiency increased eight-fold over the same period."

Emerson arrived at those numbers using a new metric called Compute Units per Second (CUPS), which it devised to quantify the performance gains delivered by more powerful chips and servers. The company, which makes power and cooling equipment for data centers, developed CUPS to provide a "placeholder metric" to highlight data center efficiency gains "in the same way that miles-per-gallon (MPG) provides an easily understood, agreed-upon efficiency measure for cars." Data center professionals can experiment with CUPS in an online data center efficiency calculator.

Emerson is using CUPS to highlight Energy Logic, its process for reducing energy use in the data center. The CUPS metric and Energy Logic program are outlined in a new white paper, Energy Logic: Calculating and Prioritizing Your Data Center IT Efficiency Actions.

The white paper argues that the greatest efficiency gains are achieved through faster replacement of high-density computing equipment (including power and cooling products). While Emerson clearly makes the case for its own products it also adds its voice to those calling for efficiency metrics that can scale from the IT device to the data center level.

"Ultimately, a universal metric will help data center professionals make significant improvements in energy efficiency while meeting growing performance demands," said Jack Pouchet, director of energy initiatives for Emerson Network Power.

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