Energy use in the information technology sector is increasing rapidly, presenting an opportunity as well as a challenge to the overall growth in energy demand.
Growing Sector Provides Potential
The information and communications technology (ICT) sector accounts for an increasing demand for energy, while also offering promising solutions to the overall increase in energy use.
On the one hand, energy-intensive computing and Internet communications are quickly becoming the fastest growing energy-use sector. According to a 2011 Stanford University/New York Times study, data centers comprised 2 percent of U.S. electricity consumption in 2010 a 250 percent jump since 2000 and increasing adoption of home electronics including computers, smartphones, digital cable set-top boxes and video game consoles are driving up domestic energy usage at the same time. However, that same study points out that data center energy consumption growth has grown slower than predicted due to increasing use of cloud computing and desktop virtualization, reducing the need for businesses to maintain their own in-house data centers and allowing them to utilize lower-power computers like thin clients or laptops.
The ICT sector also creates energy-saving opportunities by reducing freight and travel, automating building systems and technologies, optimizing utility distribution, and making smart-grid technologies possible.
Making sure that ICT equipment from the largest data centers down to your mobile phone run more efficiently is critically important to managing the world's energy use. But innovative applications of this technology can also drastically reduce the energy use of other sectors.
Commercial buildings consume 19% of primary energy in the United States, but energy-efficient technologies like the ones used by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory drastically reduce energy use in office spaces.
With 19% of primary energy in the United States consumed by commercial buildings, the Research Support Facility (RSF) is destined to serve as a model for using energy-efficient technology to drastically reduce energy use in commercial office spaces.
To support a major market shift toward cloud computing and storage, coupled with the pervasive presence of consumer electronics, data centers have become a significant segment of U.S. energy consumption.
To support a major market shift toward cloud computing and storage, coupled with the pervasive presence of consumer electronics, data centers have become a significant segment of U.S. energy consumption. In 2006, data centers in the United States used about 61 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity, representing approximately $4.5 billion and accounting for 1.5% of total U.S. electricity use.1By the end of 2010, information technology (IT)-related energy needs consumed approximately 2.2% of all U.S.
The Alliance to Save Energy’s EE Global Forum began on March 27, 2012. Alliance President Kateri Callahan brought the fifth installment of the event to order.
The Alliance to Save Energy’s EE Global Forum began on March 27, 2012, and Alliance President Kateri Callahan brought the fifth installment of the event to order with a discussion on the core concept that governments and businesses alike are focused on their economic “bottom lines,” as well as better ways to build profits, create jobs and enhance sustainability.