How Green is Cloud Computing? – New Study
October 29, 2012Grazed from CloudTimes. Author: Saroj Kar.
Cloud computing does not always prove to be an ecological choice. New research compiled by the WSP Environment & Energy and the Natural Resource Defense Council shows that cloud is not always as efficient for IT solutions for SMEs.
The results of the new study confirmed that rely on a server is generally more environmentally friendly, although care must be taken to a whole series of parameters to calculate the best real efficiency of the clouds.
“There are many reasons for moving to cloud computing, but a company choosing to do so for pure energy-efficiency reasons need to look closely at their whole IT set up as well as those of third-party offerings,” WSP director David Symons said. “Not all clouds are created equal. An on-site server room that is run with energy-efficiency best practices may be a greener alternative to a ‘brown cloud’.”
According to a new research from Pike Research, the global market for green data centers will grow from $17.1 billion in 2012 to $45.4 billion by 2016…
To be more specific to understand the real impact of the server, it is important to assess the energy source that produces electricity consumed by the storage systems, the energy efficiency of data centers and the type of equipment and devices that are used. It is also important to keep in mind that a data center has a more environmental impact than a system.
The research based on five setups scenarios, on-premise with no virtualization; colocation with no virtualization; on-premise with virtualization; private cloud; and public cloud, found that on-site server with no virtualization will emit about 46kg of CO2 per year. The figure will touch 2kg if a person using a public cloud conforming to best practices…
Read more from the source @ http://cloudtimes.org/2012/10/28/how-green-is-cloud-computing-new-study/


