Technology Times March 2009 http://www.easterntechnologycouncil.org/ Technology Times
Contents

News and Features
Finding the Money
Data Deluge, Part 4
Hermance New Council Chair
Enterprise Awards Date Set
Early Stage East
New Sales & Marketing Group
Secureworld Expo
Virtualization Conference
Stimulus Package Explained

Departments
Business Technology
Guest Columnist
Medical Devices
Member Opinion

Members
Member Reports


Advertisements

Aavalar

Evolve

DesignDesign

HolyFamily

Ixilix

ad
Vol. XXX, No. 2   May 2009

Departments

Business Technology

Going Green to Save Green

Scott Kinka
Scott Kinka

In previous issues, we’ve defined hosted solutions, discussed advantages and built a model for cost comparison of hosted versus on-premise solutions. Last month, we focused on a less-known attribute of hosted solutions — the fact that they are intrinsically built for disaster recovery or business continuity. This installment, we’ll focus on another important, but also less-known benefit —hosted services are green!

I realize that going green has a little more cachet in a good economy, but there is no question that most businesses are more in tune to their eco-footprint these days than they have ever been.

Hosted services may be one avenue that enables business owners to go green while saving green.

The Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) of any technology solution includes many things, from the cost of equipment and software, to annual maintenance fees, to carrier or service provider fees to support from external or internal staff. Most business owners tend to overlook the cost of the power and environmentals (like cooling) needed to support onsite equipment.

Powering Onsite Equipment

Staying consistent with the onsite versus hosted PBX model we’ve used in previous columns, your onsite phone system requires power for one server, the PBX Shelf/Cabinet and power per user. In a typical 24-user business, this can add up to roughly 700 watts of power. With a typical onsite PBX, the business is generally supporting multiple networks (for voice and data) that require different equipment (routers, CSU/DSU, channel banks) to function. Each additional device can generate 30-500 watts of power. Each onsite server used for file sharing or email can generate an additional 500 watts of power.

Keeping it Cool

Powering your equipment is not the only concern. Air conditioning for the server room or telcom closet requires power and increases CO2 emissions.

Most offices were not built to function as data centers. In fact, in most offices, servers and PBXs are pushed into small closets not designed for heat dissipation. Cooling these rooms requires more cooling than you generally need per square foot. According to a recent Gartner report, 70 percent of CIOs are reporting that power and/or cooling issues are now their single largest problem in data centers.

Moving it Offsite

Moving services like PBXs and servers offsite reduces the power and cooling requirements at your office significantly. You may be thinking, “aren’t I just moving all of that power and cooling to the service provider?” Of course you are. However, as has been previously detailed in this column, a hosted service provider is built for the multi-tenant environment. Services are virtualized onto large servers and equipment used by multiple customers, reducing power consumption and cooling need per end user. Some experts estimate that power consumption per employee can be reduced by upwards of 65-70%.

Technology is Not Bio-degradable

Don’t underestimate what moving PBXs and servers offsite means to the environment. The next server or PBX you buy will eventually end up in a landfill. Made up of primarily metal and plastic, it will never degrade. Worse yet, computer equipment also contains other hazardous materials, including mercury, cadmium (a known carcinogen) and hexavalent chromium (shown to cause high blood pressure, iron-poor blood, liver disease, and nerve and brain damage in animals). Disposing of the equipment poses a risk to groundwater and soil quality and may ultimately end up in your food or drinking water.

A hosted service prevents you from having to buy or upgrade that equipment in the first place. And, as detailed above, the service provider generally does not have to purchase additional equipment as well due to the multi-tenant nature of its platforms.

The Environment May Become a Regulatory Issue

Everyone agrees that being responsible towards the environment is the right thing to do and certainly no business owner would turn away from reduced costs in outsourcing services. And reducing your carbon footprint may soon become a legal requirement for many businesses.

In fact, many manufacturing businesses already have incentives to do the right thing for the environment and receive and trade energy credits based on their carbon footprints.

A carbon footprint is “the total set of GHG (greenhouse gas) emissions caused directly and indirectly by an individual, organization, event or product” (UK Carbon Trust 2008). Power and cooling use figure into your organization’s carbon footprint.

Hosted services push the responsibility to manage the carbon footprint of the business’ technology to the service provider and reduce the onsite carbon footprint.

Environmentally Conscious and Cost-Effective

For the most part, going green has meant additional expenses to the business. Rare are the situations where environmental responsibility and potential cost savings collide. Hosted solutions offer businesses a unique opportunity to respect the environment, increase productivity, and potentially, save some green.



Scott Kinka is the Senior Vice President of Network Services for Evolve IP, a provider of hosted solutions and managed technology that is unifying and simplifying the way businesses communicate. For more information, please visit www.evolveip.net.