A Priority and a Plan
        
        
        
        
		
				A new cross-industry survey on IT energy efficiency suggests that the highest
energy savings are among organizations that make energy reduction a priority
and have well-defined energy management strategies in place.
		
Higher education institutions are
making progress toward more IT
energy efficiencies, but saving energy
is still a relatively low priority
compared to other IT projects, and
most institutions report they do not
have a defined IT energy management
plan. This is according to 152
higher education institutions that
participated in CDW-G’s 2009 Energy
Efficient IT Report.
 In a follow-up to its 2008 study
  on the same topic, the national
  technology reseller canvassed five
  industries-- K-12 schools, higher ed
  institutions, federal government
  agencies, state and local governments,
  and mid-size to large businesses-- 
  to track practices, challenges,
  and successes in IT energy
  efficiency.  
      If higher ed institutions were
to adopt a full menu of IT energy
reduction initiatives, they could
save up to 16% or
$352K annually on IT
energy costs*.
 
Of the higher education IT participants,
  only 21 percent ranked energy
  use reduction as "very important"
  compared to other IT projects,
  although none of the sectors ranked
  energy reduction much higher-- the
  27 percent of K-12 respondents who
  said reducing energy was a top priority
  represented the highest percentage
  among all the market sectors
  surveyed. (The survey claims an individual
  industry sample equates to a
  margin error level of ±8 percent at a
  95 percent confidence level.)
 Even without energy savings as a
  high priority, the survey found
  improvement in higher ed IT energy
  practices and efficiencies over the
  previous year. Thirty-six percent of
  higher ed respondents now have
  defined IT energy reduction programs
  in place, compared with 31
  percent in 2008. And of those with
  programs, a greater number are realizing
  more efficiencies: In 2009, over
  half (54 percent) reported reduced IT
  energy costs of 1 percent or more,
  compared with 38 percent in 2008.
  One percent of the average higher ed
  IT budget spent on energy ($2.2M)
  represents about $22K in annual
  savings. The study estimates that if
  higher ed institutions were to adopt
  a full menu of IT energy initiatives
  (such as purchasing Energy Star
  qualifying devices and virtualizing
  servers and storage), they could
  save up to 16 percent or $352K
  annually on IT energy expenditures.  
The CDW-G report suggests that
  having IT energy management strategies
  in place is probably the single
  most important factor in determining
  whether an organization will reduce
  energy costs. CDW-G’s analysis
  points to four key practices of successful
  IT energy management:  
  - Institutions need to directly
      ask IT to manage energy efficiency
      as a priority and then support the
      effort across the institution.      
-  IT organizations need to inform
        all of their operations about the
        tools available to monitor IT energy
        efficiency.        
-  IT should designate an energy
          advocate within its organization to
          take responsibility for tracking consumption
          and advocating for
          improvements.
-  Institutions should recognize
            and reward IT efforts that result in
            energy reductions and savings.
            To see the full report, go here.
*Based on average higher ed IT budget spent
on energy: $2.2M