By Steve Ranger, 27 September 2007 13:02
NEWS
Nearly half of IT executives - 42 per cent - admit their company does not monitor IT-related energy spending.
A further nine per cent don't know, and of those that do monitor it a quarter have seen their energy consumption increase over the past two years.
The figures come from IBM-sponsored research which claims while green issues might have a high profile within companies, few businesses have anything close to a proper strategy for dealing with it from an IT perspective.
But the research warned that rising energy costs and power hungry technology mean these IT issues will continue to climb the corporate agenda - in the US, for example, servers and data centres accounted for 1.5 per cent of the country's total electricity consumption in 2006, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. And earlier this year silicon.com's CIO Jury confirmed that the proportion of budget taken up by energy and electricity costs is rising rapidly.
More than half of execs polled said their company does not measure the environmental impact of its IT systems and policies - and just one-third said they do. While two-thirds said their organisation has a board-level executive responsible for energy and the environment, only 45 per cent of businesses have a programme in place to reduce their carbon footprint. And the majority of those that have a strategy don't have any specific targets for it.
Reliability, price and after-sales support are still the biggest factors when making IT purchases, it found - with only 12 per cent of 213 CIO respondents saying the energy efficiency of IT equipment is a critical purchasing criterion.
In related news, Dell has committed to making its worldwide operations carbon neutral. This will involve energy-efficiency, using renewable power and offsetting the remaining impacts.
It said the plan involves emissions created by electricity use and facility heating and cooling. The company will also offset the emissions impact of employee business travel.

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1. Roger Huffadine
The great benefit of reduced power consumption from more modern PCs & ITC technology is that a company saves on infrastructure costs. We recently introduced and extra 50% of PCs in IT rooms + some air conditioning to a server room without having to upgrade the incomming mains distribution system - it took careful calculations, examinating of distribution boards and calculations on cable volt drops - but as a school we were able to save several thousand pounds on mains cabling [a lot of money in a state school!!!].
I magine that for very large companies the savings on infrastructure will outweigh the odd milliamp per PC that could be shaved in the purchasing decision.