Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Green IT hits the CIO radar

A new report by independent market analyst Datamonitor, “2008 Trends to Watch: Green IT”, predicts a surge in CIO interest and vendor initiatives in the Green IT space. It reveals that tighter regulatory measures and advances in technology are feeding renewed interest in Green IT. In an independent survey conducted by Datamonitor, over 75% of respondent firms considered eco-friendly computing as an important element in their IT strategy while a further 15% rated it as their top IT priority.

IT organizations today face the dual challenge of shrinking budgets and sprawling infrastructure footprints. In addition, regulations around data privacy and electronic waste disposal are getting tighter by the year. It is against this backdrop that a majority of enterprises are beginning to realize the full potential of eco-friendly computing practices – significant cost savings, increased flexibility in managing IT resources, and compliance with environmental regulations.

Virtualization technologies have come to be regarded as being synonymous with green – offering both significant cost savings and reductions in enterprise carbon footprints. Server and storage virtualization technologies have matured over the last two to three years, to the extent that one in three companies with a Green IT strategy in place already makes use of these technologies.

Enterprises are embracing a lifecycle approach to retirement and disposal of IT hardware assets, leading to significant benefits in terms of cost savings and mitigated legal risks. Hardware refreshes are planned based on energy efficiency and components are disposed of in a safe manner - over two thirds of enterprises have a formal program in place to recycle their IT assets.

IT vendors are forging the path ahead for Green IT adoption, with all major players announcing corporate initiatives in eco-friendly computing. As a result, innovations across the design, manufacturing and service realms are beginning to impact the user world in a big way. Light Emitting Diode (LED) and Solid State Disk (SSD) technologies are already hitting the mainstream, and so is the Software-as-a-Service mode of application delivery, which exploits shared infrastructure.
More information on the service and support industry can be found at www.SupportIndustry.com

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