Meeting the rising demand for increased Data Center efficiency and a reduced carbon footprint

In today’s digital era, data has become a vital asset of every business, and the use of the Internet has exponentially amplified over the years. From making communication faster to accessing services easily it has exposed individuals to thousands of benefits of a connected world. The usage of smartphones and social media, the government’s emphasis on the digital economy, and the rise in technology-driven businesses have led to the rapid growth in data usage and storage.
Accelerated by a global pandemic, the world has undergone noticeable changes in terms of data consumption and the use of digital technology. Digital technology has become an integral part of our day-to-day lives. Even though miles apart – we are closer than ever. With stay at home restrictions, we are always on, consuming, generating, and storing data though various devices and platforms.
With increasing data usage and creation and with the growing significance of data in today’s businesses, data management is critical to manage and govern large data sets for business growth. Companies want to leverage well-equipped data centers for better data management.
With demand for data centers growing at an unprecedented rate and the application of the Internet of Things (IoT) in all areas of work and play, the demand for computing power continues to accelerate – especially as the lure of big data gathers momentum. Data center operators are under pressures to keep up with demand in a timely, but environmentally responsible way. The modern Data Centers need to be space-saving, timesaving, energy-saving, cost-saving and infinitely scalable.
Data Center Automation
You can’t truly optimize the efficiency of your data center without a holistic view of the system. Digital Data Center Operations (DDO) and Data Center Automation (DCA) enable you to identify inefficient power consumption, monitor and optimize water usage, and manage reporting to track progress and compliance. Industrial-grade automation systems should be used to monitor and manage data center infrastructure. Industrial automation systems are robust and highly hardened systems that can scale from small to extremely large and from simple to extremely complex. They are designed to talk to all kinds of equipment using many different protocols and have been designed for continuous operations over long periods, even while being upgraded. Furthermore, industrial systems are cyber-secure, needing to comply to the rigorous standards set in the various industrial environments in which they operate.
Data Center Automation systems are industrial automation systems adapted for use in data centers. They eliminate the requirement for band-aid solutions in the facility since they are designed to run continuously and reliably via built-in redundancy and are designed for scalability. Since they perform the functions of all the various siloed systems they replace, they are also cheaper to install and maintain, as only a single system is necessary to cover all building management and electrical monitoring tasks.
Revisiting the service strategies, optimizing operations, and reducing downtime
As data centers change their business models to match their strong sustainability goals, rethinking service strategies could help achieve them. When considering a data center service strategy, conditioning monitoring can go a long way in extending the life cycles of your equipment, managing the infrastructure, and therefore avoiding costly failures.
Condition-based monitoring provides a good example of cost-savings technology. Here maintenance is triggered using predictive indicators, rather than after a set time interval. Health information is collected from the electrical and mechanical systems, aggregated, analyzed, and compared to historical data to provide advanced warning of degrading equipment performance or impending failure. This approach optimizes operations, reduces the risk of downtime, and eliminates waste associated with premature or unnecessary maintenance.
Predictive maintenance, energy optimization, dynamic load forecasting, etc., are possible only through consolidation of data center facility information – and consolidation is only possible when robust, reliable, industrial technologies are used.
Intelligent data centers
Technologies such as 5G and the Internet of Things are pushing data center designs to new levels of complexity. IT loads will become far more dispersed and fluid and the facilities that power them will have to be much more adaptable. To be truly efficient, the facility itself has to be “self-driving” and predictive so it can deliver energy and cooling to handle such transient loads.
Energy and insight for the data centers of tomorrow
In the dynamic, fast-paced data center industry, a passion for change is essential. Amongst several other sustainable mechanisms, decarbonisation and advanced technology could help data centres become energy efficient despite location limitations. With evolving scientific technology, the world’s largest corporates need to explore ways to meet business as well as environmental goals. Outsourcing, renewable energy, constantly researching and developing new mechanisms, and investigating ways to run data centres effectively and efficiently should be the need of the hour.
Sustainability is not just a buzzword, but of utmost importance in today’s day and age. With climate change ravaging the planet, data centres can effectively reduce carbon emissions, ensure efficacy, and propel the world towards a greener, healthier, and technologically advanced world.
With its history and deep knowledge of both energy and automation, as well as its role in the transition to smart and autonomous systems, ABB is at the forefront of creating efficient and reliable data centers.