Green computing
Abstract:
Green computing, green IT or
ICT Sustainability, refers to environmentally sustainable computing or
IT. In the article Harnessing Green IT: Principles and Practices, San
Murugesan defines the field of green computing as "the study and practice
of designing, manufacturing, using, and disposing of computers, servers, and
associated subsystemssuch as monitors, printers, storage devices, and
networking and communications systems efficiently
and
effectively with minimal or no impact on the environment."
The goals of green computing are similar
to green chemistry; reduce the use of hazardous materials, maximize energy
efficiency during the product's lifetime, and promote the recyclability or
biodegradability of defunct products and factory waste. Research continues into
key areas such as making the use of computers as energy-efficient as possible,
and designing algorithms and systems for efficiency-related computer
technologies.
Origins
Energy Star logo In 1992, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency launched Energy Star, a voluntary labeling
program that is designed to promote and recognize energy-efficiency in monitors,
climate control equipment, and other technologies. This resulted in the widespread
adoption of sleep mode among consumer electronics.
Concurrently, the Swedish organization
TCO Development launched the TCO Certification program to promote low magnetic
and electrical emissions from CRT-based computer displays; this program was
later expanded to include criteria on energy consumption, ergonomics, and the
use of hazardous materials in construction.
Regulations
and industry initiatives
The Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) has published a survey of over 90 government
and industry initiatives on "Green ICTs", i.e. information and
communication technologies, the environment and climate change. The report
concludes that initiatives tend to concentrate on the greening ICTs
themselves
rather than on their actual implementation to tackle global warming and
environmental degradation. In general, only 20% of initiatives have measurable
targets, with government programs tending to include targets more frequently
than business associations.
Government
Many governmental agencies have
continued to implement standards and regulations that encourage green computing.
The Energy Star program was revised in October 2006 to include stricter
efficiency requirements for computer equipment, along with a tiered ranking
system for approved products.
Some efforts place responsibility on the
manufacturer to dispose of the equipment themselves after it is no longer needed;
this is called the extended producer responsibility model. The European Union's
directives 2002/95/EC (Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive), on the
reduction of hazardous substances, and 2002/96/EC (Waste Electrical and
Electronic Equipment Directive) on waste electrical and electronic equipment
required the substitution of heavy metals and flame retardants like
Polybrominated biphenyl and Polybrominated diphenyl ethers in all electronic
equipment put on the market starting on July 1, 2006. The directives placed
responsibility on manufacturers for the gathering and recycling of old equipment.
There are currently 26 US states that
have established state-wide recycling programs for obsolete computers and consumer
electronics equipment. The statutes either impose an "advance recovery
fee" for each unit sold at retail or require the manufacturers to reclaim
the equipment at disposal.
In 2010, the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA) was signed into legislation by President Obama. The
bill allocated over $90 billion to be invested in green initiatives (renewable
energy, smart grids, energy efficiency, etc.) In January 2010, the U.S. Energy
Department granted $47 million of the ARRA money towards projects that aim to
improve the energy efficiency of data centers. The projects will provide
research on the following three areas: optimize data center hardware and
software, improve power supply chain, and data center cooling technologies.
Industry
•
Climate
Savers Computing Initiative (CSCI) is an effort to reduce the electric power
consumption of PCs in active and inactive states. The CSCI provides a catalog
of green products from its member organizations, and information for reducing
PC power consumption. It was started on 2007-06-12. The name stems from the
World Wildlife Fund's Climate Savers program, which was launched in 1999. The
WWF is also a member of the Computing Initiative.
•
The
Green Electronics Council offers the Electronic Product Environmental
Assessment Tool (EPEAT) to assist in the purchase of "greener"
computing systems. The Council evaluates computing equipment on 51 criteria –
23 required and 28 optional - that measure a product's efficiency and
sustainability attributes. Products are rated Gold, Silver, or Bronze,
depending on how many optional criteria they meet. On 2007-01-24, President
George W. Bush issued Executive Order 13423, which requires all United States
Federal agencies to use EPEAT when purchasing computer systems.
•
The
Green Grid is a global consortium dedicated to advancing energy efficiency in
data centers and business computing ecosystems. It was founded in February 2007
by several key companies in the industry – AMD, APC, Dell,
HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Rackable Systems, SprayCool, Sun Microsystems and
VMware. The Green Grid has since grown to hundreds of members, including
end-users and government organizations, all focused on improving data center
infrastructure efficiency (DCIE).
•
Green
Comm Challenge is an organization that promotes the development of energy
conservation technology and practices in the field of Information and
Communications Technology (ICT).
•
The
Transaction Processing Performance Council(TPC) Energy specification augments
the existing TPC benchmarks by allowing for optional publications of energy
metrics alongside their performance results.
•
The
SPEC Power is the first industry standard benchmark that measures power
consumption in relation to performance for server-class computers.
Approaches
In the article Harnessing Green IT:
Principles and Practices, San Murugesan defines the field of green
computing as "the study and practice of designing, manufacturing, using,
and disposing of computers, servers, and associated subsystems such
as monitors, printers, storage devices, and networking and communications
systems efficiently and effectively with minimal or no impact on the
environment."
Murugesan lays out four paths along which
he believes the environmental effects of computing should be addressed. Green
use, green disposal, green design, and green manufacturing. Green computing can
also develop solutions that offer benefits by "aligning all IT processes
and practices with the core principles of sustainability, which are to reduce,
reuse, and recycle; and finding innovative ways to use IT in business processes
to deliver sustainability benefits across the enterprise and beyond".
Modern IT systems rely upon a complicated
mix of people, networks, and hardware; as such, a green computing initiative
must cover all of these areas as well. A solution may also need to address end
user satisfaction, management restructuring, regulatory compliance, and return
on investment (ROI). There are also considerable fiscal motivations for
companies to take control of their own power consumption; "of the power
management tools available, one of the most powerful may still be simple,
plain, common sense."
Product
longevity
Gartner maintains that the PC
manufacturing process accounts for 70 % of the natural resources used in the
life cycle of a PC. More recently, Fujitsu released a Life Cycle Assessment
(LCA) of a desktop that show that manufacturing and end of life accounts for
the majority of this laptop ecological footprint. Therefore, the biggest
contribution
to green computing usually is to prolong the equipment's lifetime. Another
report from Gartner recommends to "Look for product longevity, including
upgradability and modularity." For
instance,
manufacturing
a new PC makes a far bigger ecological footprint than manufacturing a new RAM
module to upgrade an existing one.
Data
center design
Data center facilities are heavy consumers
of energy, accounting for between 1.1% and 1.5% of the world’s
total energy use in 2010. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates that data
center facilities consume up to 100 to 200 times more energy than standard
office buildings.
Energy efficient data center design
should address all of the energy use aspects included in a data center: from
the IT equipment to the HVAC equipment to the actual location, configuration
and construction of the building.
The U.S. Department of Energy specifies
five primary areas on which to focus energy efficient data center design
best
practices:
•
Information
technology (IT) systems
•
Environmental
conditions
•
Air
management
•
Cooling
systems
•
Electrical
systems
Additional energy efficient design opportunities
specified by the U.S. Department of Energy include on-site electrical generation
and recycling of waste heat.
Energy efficient data center design
should help to better utilize a data center’s space, and
increase performance and efficiency.
Software
and deployment optimization
Algorithmic
efficiency
The efficiency of algorithms has an
impact on the amount of computer resources required for any given computing function
and there are many efficiency trade-offs in writing programs. While algorithmic
efficiency does not have as much impact as other approaches , it is still an
important consideration. A study by a physicist at Harvard, estimated that the
average Google search released 7 grams of carbon dioxide (CO₂). However, Google disputes this
figure, arguing instead that a typical search produces only 0.2 grams of CO. More
recently, an independent study by GreenIT.fr
demonstrate that Windows 7 + Office 2010 require 70 times more memory
(RAM) than Windows 98 + Office 2000 to write exactly the same text or send
exactly the same e-mail than 10 years ago
Resource
allocation
Algorithms can also be used to route
data to data centers where electricity is less expensive. Researchers from MIT,
Carnegie Mellon University, and Akamai have tested an energy allocation
algorithm that successfully routes traffic to the location with the cheapest
energy costs. The researchers project up to a 40 percent savings on energy
costs if their proposed algorithm were to be deployed. However, this approach
does not actually reduce the amount of energy being used; it reduces only the
cost to the company using it. Nonetheless, a similar strategy could be used to
direct traffic to rely on energy that is produced in a more environmentally
friendly or efficient way. A similar approach has also been used to cut energy
usage by routing traffic away from data centers experiencing warm weather; this
allows computers to be shut down to avoid using air conditioning.
Larger server centers are sometimes
located where energy and land are inexpensive and readily available. Local availability
of renewable energy, climate that allows outside air to be used for cooling, or
locating them where the heat they produce may be used for other purposes could
be factors in green siting decisions.
Virtualization
Computer virtualization refers to the
abstraction of computer resources, such as the process of running two or more logical
computer systems on one set of physical hardware. The concept originated with
the IBM mainframe operating systems of the 1960s, but was commercialized for
x86-compatible computers only in the 1990s. With virtualization, a system
administrator could combine several physical systems into virtual machines on
one single, powerful system, thereby unplugging the original hardware and
reducing power and cooling consumption.
Virtualization can assist in distributing
work so that servers are either busy or put in a low-power sleep state. Several
commercial companies and open-source projects now offer software packages to
enable a transition to virtual computing. Intel Corporation and AMD have also
built proprietary virtualization enhancements to the x86 instruction set into
each of their CPU product lines, in order to facilitate virtualized computing.
Terminal
servers
Terminal servers have also been used in
green computing. When using the system, users at a terminal connect to a central
server; all of the actual computing is done on the server, but the end user
experiences the operating system on the terminal. These can be combined with
thin clients, which use up to 1/8 the amount of energy of a normal workstation,
resulting in a decrease of energy costs and consumption. There has been an
increase in using terminal services with thin clients to create virtual labs.
Examples of terminal server software include Terminal Services for Windows and
the Linux Terminal Server Project (LTSP) for the Linux operating system.
Power
management
The Advanced Configuration and Power
Interface (ACPI), an open industry standard, allows an operating system to directly
control the power-saving aspects of its underlying hardware. This allows a
system to automatically turn off components such as monitors and hard drives
after set periods of inactivity. In addition, a system may hibernate, where
most components (including the CPU and the system RAM) are turned off. ACPI is
a successor to an earlier Intel-Microsoft standard called Advanced Power
Management, which allows a computer's BIOS to control power management
functions.
Some programs allow the user to manually
adjust the voltages supplied to the CPU, which reduces both the amount of heat
produced and electricity consumed. This process is called undervolting. Some
CPUs can automatically undervolt the processor, depending on the workload; this
technology is called "SpeedStep" on Intel processors, "PowerNow!"/"Cool'n'Quiet"
on AMD chips, LongHaul on VIA CPUs, and LongRun with Transmeta processors.
Data
center power
Data centers, which have been criticized
for its extraordinary high energy demand, are a primary focus for proponents of
green computing. The federal government has set a minimum 10% reduction target
for data center energy usage by 2011. With the aid of a self-styled ultraefficient
evaporative cooling technology, Google Inc. has been able to reduce its energy
consumption to 50% of that of the industry average.
Operating
system support
The dominant desktop operating system,
Microsoft Windows, has included limited PC power management features since
Windows 95. These initially provided for stand-by (suspend-to-RAM) and a
monitor low power state.
Further iterations of Windows added hibernate
(suspend-to-disk) and support for the ACPI standard. Windows 2000 was the first
NT-based operating system to include power management. This required major
changes to the underlying operating system architecture and a new hardware
driver model. Windows 2000 also introduced Group Policy, a technology that
allowed administrators to centrally configure most Windows features. However,
power management was not one of those features.
This is probably because the power
management settings design relied upon a connected set of per-user and
per-machine binary registry values, effectively leaving it up to each user to configure
their own power management settings. This approach, which is not compatible
with Windows Group Policy, was repeated in Windows XP. The reasons for this
design decision by Microsoft are not known, and it has resulted in heavy
criticism. Microsoft significantly improved this in Windows Vista by
redesigning the power management system to allow basic configuration by Group
Policy. The support offered is limited to a single per-computer policy. The
most recent release, Windows 7 retains these limitations but does include
refinements for more efficient user of operating system timers, processor power
management, and display panel brightness. The most significant change in
Windows 7 is in the user experience. The prominence of the default High
Performance power plan has been reduced with the aim of encouraging users to
save power.
There is a significant market in
third-party PC power management software offering features beyond those present
in
the
Windows operating system available. Most products offer Active Directory
integration and per-user/per-machine settings with the more advanced offering
multiple power plans, scheduled power plans, anti-insomnia features and
enterprise power usage reporting. Notable vendors include 1E NightWatchman., Data
Synergy PowerMAN (Software), Faronics Power Save and Verdiem SURVEYOR.
Power
supply
Desktop computer power supplies (PSUs)
are in general 70–75% efficient, dissipating the remaining
energy as heat. An industry initiative called 80 PLUS certifies PSUs that are
at least 80% efficient; typically these models are drop-in replacements for
older, less efficient PSUs of the same form factor. As of July 20, 2007, all
new Energy Star 4.0-certified desktop PSUs must be at least 80% efficient.
Storage
Smaller form factor (e.g., 2.5 inch)
hard disk drives often consume less power per gigabyte than physically larger drives.
Unlike hard disk drives, solid-state drives store data in flash memory or DRAM.
With no moving parts, power consumption may be reduced somewhat for
low-capacity flash-based devices. In a recent case study, Fusion-io,
manufacturer of solid state storage devices, managed to reduce the energy use
and operating costs of MySpace data centers by 80% while increasing performance
speeds beyond that which had been attainable via multiple hard disk drives in
Raid 0. In response, MySpace was able to retire several of their servers.
As hard drive prices have fallen,
storage farms have tended to increase in capacity to make more data available online.
This includes archival and backup data that would formerly have been saved on
tape or other offline storage.
The increase in online storage has
increased power consumption. Reducing the power consumed by large storage arrays,
while still providing the benefits of online storage, is a subject of ongoing
research.
Video
card
A fast GPU may be the largest power
consumer in a computer.
Energy-efficient
display options include:
•
No
video card - use a shared terminal, shared thin client, or desktop sharing
software if display required.
•
Use
motherboard video output - typically low 3D performance and low power.
•
Select
a GPU based on low idle power, average wattage, or performance per watt.
Display
CRT monitors typically use more power
than LCD monitors. They also contain significant amounts of lead. LCD monitors
typically use a cold-cathode fluorescent bulb to provide light for the display.
Some newer displays use an array of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) in place of
the fluorescent bulb, which reduces the amount of electricity used by the
display. Fluorescent back-lights also contain mercury, whereas LED back-lights
do not.
Materials
recycling
Recycling computing equipment can keep
harmful materials such as lead, mercury, and hexavalent chromium out of landfills,
and can also replace equipment that otherwise would need to be manufactured,
saving further energy and emissions. Computer systems that have outlived their
particular function can be re-purposed, or donated to various charities and
non-profit organizations. However, many charities have recently imposed minimum
system requirements for donated equipment. Additionally, parts from outdated
systems may be salvaged and recycled through certain retail outlets and
municipal or private recycling centers. Computing supplies, such as printer cartridges,
paper, and batteries may be recycled as well.
A drawback to many of these schemes is
that computers gathered through recycling drives are often shipped to developing
countries where environmental standards are less strict than in North America
and Europe. The Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition estimates that 80% of the
post-consumer e-waste collected for recycling is shipped abroad to countries
such as China and Pakistan.
In 2011, the collection rate of e-waste
is still very low, even in the most ecology-responsible countries like France.
In this country, e-waste collection is still at a 14% annual rate between
electronic equipments sold and e-waste collected for 2006 to 2009.
The recycling of old computers raises an
important privacy issue. The old storage devices still hold private information,
such as emails, passwords, and credit card numbers, which can be recovered
simply by someone's using software available freely on the Internet. Deletion
of a file does not actually remove the file from the hard drive. Before
recycling a computer, users should remove the hard drive, or hard drives if
there is more than one, and physically destroy it or store it somewhere safe.
There are some authorized hardware recycling companies to whom the computer may
be given for recycling, and they typically sign a non-disclosure agreement.
Telecommuting
Teleconferencing and telepresence
technologies are often implemented in green computing initiatives. The advantages
are many; increased worker satisfaction, reduction of greenhouse gas emissions
related to travel, and increased profit margins as a result of lower overhead
costs for office space, heat, lighting, etc. The savings are significant; the
average annual energy consumption for U.S. office buildings is over 23 kilowatt
hours per square foot, with heat, air conditioning and lighting accounting for
70% of all energy consumed. Other related initiatives, such as hotelling,
reduce the square footage per employee as workers reserve space only when they
need it. Many types of jobs, such as sales, consulting, and field service,
integrate well with this technique.
Voice over IP (VoIP) reduces the
telephony wiring infrastructure by sharing the existing Ethernet copper. VoIP
and phone extension mobility also made hot desking more practical.
Education
and certification
Green
computing programs
Degree and postgraduate programs that
provide training in a range of information technology concentrations along
with
sustainable strategies in an effort to educate students how to build and
maintain systems while reducing its negative impact on the environment. The
Australian National University (ANU) offers "ICT Sustainability" as
part of its information technology and engineering masters programs. Athabasca
University offer a similar course "Green ICT Strategies", adapted
from the ANU course notes.
Green
computing certifications
Some certifications demonstrate that an
individual has specific green computing knowledge, including:
•
Green
Computing Initiative - GCI offers the Certified Green Computing User Specialist
(CGCUS), Certified Green Computing Architect (CGCA) and Certified Green
Computing Professional (CGCP) certifications.
•
CompTIA
Strata Green IT is designed for IT managers to show that they have good
knowledge of green IT practices and methods and why it is important to
incorporate them into an organization.
•
Information
Systems Examination Board (ISEB) Foundation Certificate in Green IT is
appropriate for showing an overall understanding and awareness of green
computing and where its implementation can be beneficial.
•
Australian
Computer Society (ACS) The ACS offers a certificate for "Green Technology Strategies"
as part of the Computer Professional Education Program (CPEP). Award of a
certificate requires completion of a 12 week e-learning course, with written assignments.
Advantages:
Ø
Reduced energy usage from green computing
techniques translates into lower carbon dioxide emissions, stemming from a
reduction in the fossil fuel used in power plants and transportation.
Ø
Conserving resources means less energy is
required to produce, use, and dispose of products. saving energy and resources
saves money.
Ø
Green computing even includes changing
government policy to encourage recycling and lowering energy use by individuals
and businesses.
Ø Reduce
the risk existing in the laptops such as chemical known to cause cancer, nerve
damage and immune reactions in humans.
Ø The advantages to green computing are realized on both
large and small scales. Green technologies are available for an entire
organization or for a single employee's workstation. Unfortunately, many
companies and business owners are stalled by the initially larger investment in
green technology, and fail to realize the long-term benefits and cost savings.
As such, let's examine adjustments that can be made regarding green computing
and IT support, big or small.
Ø Green
computing helps minimize CO2 emissions by using green technology and IT
systems that
harness renewable energy sources, instead of drawing out power from
fossil-fueled electric grids.
Disadvantages:
Ø
Green
computing could actually be quite costly. Given that there has been a green
process that the computer will have gone through in order to make the computer
in the first place; there will usually be some kind of added cost when the
computer has been finished. Green computing takes a lot of new technology, and
hence, you may find that you will have to pay a premium price for your new
green computer.
Ø
Furthermore,
some computers that are green may be considerably underpowered. Some people may
need incredibly power-consuming and powerful computers to deal with the tasks
that they need them to do. This is another disadvantage that many people who
have high-powered computers believe to have with green computers.
Conclusion:
By adopting current lower power technologies, computers can
already be made significantly more energy efficient. The computing industry is
more prepared and far more competent than almost any other industry when it
domes to facing and responding to rapid change.
Environmentally it is not a good thing that most PCs especially in companies have typically entered
a landfill after only a few years in service.
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