Data centers struggle to keep their cool

By Tim Ferguson, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, April 13, 2007 10:55 AM

A data center crisis is brewing as energy supply and cooling technology struggle to keep pace with businesses' insatiable demand for computing power.

Given the increasing use of high density hardware such as multi-core processors and blade servers, excessive power and cooling demands could lead to a rise in server failures, according to Aperture Research Institute (ARI), a division of software company Aperture Technologies.

New research from ARI found that 38 percent of data centers are already running at dangerous levels of power consumption, meaning they are at risk of failing due to a power shortfall.

According to analyst house Gartner, 50 percent of data centers will have insufficient power or cooling capacity to meet demand by 2008. The analyst predicts spending on power and cooling technology will exceed server spending this year.

Bill Clifford, CEO of Aperture, said: "Many users are simply unaware of the dangers they are introducing to their data centers. There is an impending crisis."

Clifford said in the past cooling issues could be resolved in a matter of weeks as suppliers of cooling equipment could cope with demand. But with the increased demand, the lead time for new equipment can be up to 18 months, putting firms at risk of experiencing data center downtime.

Clifford suggested the big leap in technology needed to solve the problem--likely to come from semiconductor firms such as Intel and AMD--won't happen for around five years.

Firms will therefore need to turn to technology which helps identify where data centers could reduce energy usage and better balance demand.

Aperture Technologies is about to launch its Vista capacity management software which is designed to help businesses balance energy demand across their data centers.

"If organizations don't step up and address the issue today, the cost is going to continue to go up," Clifford warned.

Tim Ferguson of Silicon.com reported from London.


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