By VSM News Staff
published: Tuesday, May 06 2008
VMware
Software Has Saved Customers 39 Billion Kilowatt Hours of Electricity, More
than the Power Used Annually to Heat and Cool the Country of Denmark.
PALO ALTO, Calif.,
May 6, 2008 -VMware, Inc. (NYSE: VMW),
the global leader in virtualization solutions from the desktop to the
datacenter, today announced that its virtualization solutions are saving customers
tons in costs and CO2 emissions. Using VMware
virtualization, customers can consolidate 10 or more physical machines onto a
single server and reduce power consumption and cost by 80-90 percent. VMware customers that have moved from a 1:1 application
to server ratio to 60:1 or higher have achieved millions of dollars in capital
and operational savings.
For every
server virtualized, customers can save about 7,000 kilowatt hours (kWh), or
four tons of CO2 emissions, every year. VMware has virtualized more than
6 million server workloads since 1998, resulting in an estimated energy savings
of nearly 39 Billion kWh, or roughly $4.4 billion. This is roughly equivalent
to the total energy consumption of Denmark for one year. PCs
virtualized and hosted on servers in the datacenter can also reduce power
consumption and cost by 35 percent. Hosting desktops in the datacenter
also doubles the replacement cycle of PCs or thin clients, reducing the
environmental impact associated with manufacturing new equipment.
"Most servers and desktops
today are still consuming 70-80 percent of their rated power even when
idle," said Stephen Herrod, chief technology officer, VMware.
"VMware is able to deliver substantial power and cost savings through
innovative power management capabilities in our virtualization solutions that
safely power down or throttle servers when not in use. By powering down servers
and desktops during inactive periods such as evenings or weekends, we can help
customers save another 25 percent or more on power consumption without
affecting applications or users."
Since 2006, VMware has been an
active pioneer in working with utility companies to offer incentive programs
supporting virtualization projects in datacenters. VMware works with
utilities across North America including Pacific Gas and Electric, Southern
California Edison, SDG&E, BC Hydro and Austin Energy to provide
customers incentives based on the amount of energy savings achieved through
data center consolidation.
Sheffield Hallam University Virtualizes with VMware, Cuts 269 Tons of CO2 and Saves
£43,000 on Power Bills Annually
Sheffield Hallam, one of the UK's
most innovative and progressive universities with more than 28,000 students and
over 5,000 staff, required a number of new IT services to support its user
community. This led to the number of servers within the datacenter
doubling within twelve months. The building's electricity grid
could not supply enough power to reliably support the required number of
servers within the main datacenter, and physical space was also a major issue.
Sheffield Hallam is using VMware's market-leading datacenter
virtualization and management platform, VMware Infrastructure 3, to reduce
power and cooling requirements in the datacenter and improve the delivery of IT
services. VMware Infrastructure 3 provides the capability for automatic load
balancing, business continuity and power management and the ability to move a
virtual machine across physical machines to minimize service interruption.
"With the server farm growing towards
capacity, we knew a completely new strategy was required," said Dave
Thornley, service support manager, Sheffield
Hallam University.
"We decided that moving to a virtual infrastructure would be the most
effective way to tackle cost management and space issues. Using VMware,
we have made a huge impact on our power bills as well as leading to major
savings in the deployment of new services to users."
For more information on how other companies
have gone green and reduced costs using VMware virtualization, please visit: http://www.vmware.com/solutions/consolidation/green/
About VMware
VMware (NYSE: VMW) is the global leader in
virtualization solutions from the desktop to the datacenter. Customers of
all sizes rely on VMware to reduce capital and operating expenses, ensure
business continuity, strengthen security and go green. With 2007 revenues of $1.3
billion, more than 100,000 customers and nearly 14,000 partners, VMware is one
of the fastest growing public software companies. VMware is headquartered
in Palo Alto, California and on the web at www.vmware.com.
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