The standard was set up by the EPA to encourage organisations to invest in more energy efficient PCs, printers, air conditioning units and lighting equipment by flagging up environmentally-friendly products.
The EPA is looking to categorise servers based on redundancy, number of processors and the amount of installed memory, and has called on server manufacturers to help by submitting idle and configuration data by 19 September.
Energy Star for servers has been a long time coming, partially because every manufacturer uses different ways to measure energy consumption, according to Butler Group analyst Roy Ilsley.
Ilsley added that, although it would be useful for smaller firms to look for Energy Star labels when buying servers, it may be less relevant for large enterprises.
"The big issue with Energy Star is that only 25 per cent of IT departments even pay their energy bills, so purchasing decisions are often made purely on the cost of the device," he argued.
Energy Star for servers gets closer
By
Phil Muncaster
on Aug 19, 2008 9:42AM
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Guiding customers on the uneven path to AI adoption
How mandatory climate reporting is raising the bar for corporate leadership
Shared Intelligence is the Real Competitive Edge Partners Enjoy with Crayon
How Expert Support Can Help Partners and SMBs Realize the Full Value of AI
MSPs with a robust data protection strategy will achieve market success
Sponsored Whitepapers
Cut through the SASE confusion
Stay protected as cyber threats evolve
Defend Your Network from the Next Generation of AI Threats
The race to AI advantage is on. Don’t let slow consulting projects hold you back.
The changing face of Australian distribution




