Uptime Institute
announced a new Executive Advisory report series titled "Digital
infrastructure sustainability - a manager's guide" and
released the first installment: "Creating a sustainability strategy." The new advisory series is a uniquely practical resource
that owners and operators can use to establish and implement an effective
sustainability strategy.
The launch of this comprehensive executive advisory series is the
latest step in Uptime's longstanding and expanding program to inform, guide and
support sustainability efforts within the sector - and it comes at a critical
time for digital infrastructure operators. Governments worldwide are beginning
to establish new regulations and promulgate new policies to discourage
unsustainable data center growth, drive procurement of low-carbon data center
services, and move toward net-zero carbon emissions goals.
However, research by Uptime clearly shows that most organizations have
not put in place many of the strategies, processes and controls they will need
to meet all stakeholder expectations and legislator demands. According to
Uptime's 2021 Global Data
Center Survey, most organizations tend to only compile and report on
power-related sustainability metrics, while far too few are tracking other key
elements such as water use (just 51%), greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (just
33%), and IT efficiency (just 25%).
The first report in the series, "Creating a sustainability
strategy," defines the key elements to include in a sustainability
strategy, the actions necessary for a successful implementation, and the
processes required to measure progress against goals and objectives. Download
an executive summary of the report and register for the accompanying webinar on
Tuesday, May 10th at 9:00 a.m. PDT here.
The complete series of six reports takes managers through the key
areas that must be addressed in an environmental sustainability strategy,
ranging from creating the strategy, reducing energy consumption, buying
renewable energy, tracking and reporting carbon emissions, managing water
consumption, and equipment reuse and recycling. The advisory series also
provides guidance on compliance with and the adoption of critical standards and
legislative initiatives, many of which are both confused and confusing.
"As sustainability requirements become more demanding, digital
infrastructure operators must be prepared with a comprehensive, actionable
sustainability strategy," said Andy Lawrence, founding member and executive
director, Uptime Intelligence.
"This advisory series is a "how-to" guide to implementing
effective environmental sustainability initiatives that span all facilities and
IT operations and address the needs of all stakeholders inside and outside the
organization," said Jay Dietrich, research director of sustainability, Uptime
Intelligence and lead author of the report series.
Uptime has been advising operators of digital infrastructure on
sustainability and efficiency since 2007, the year of the first Uptime
Institute Green Data Center forum. Through its Sustainability
Consulting Services and related offerings, Uptime advises some of the world's largest
digital infrastructure owners and operators, many vendors and equipment
manufacturers, regulators and policymakers to help the sector design, build and
operate digital infrastructure sustainably-without compromising resiliency.
UPCOMING REPORTS IN THE
SERIES:
- "Reducing
the energy footprint" - The first objective of a sustainability
plan is to minimize energy use through efficiency measures. Further
benefits will be realized by replacing electricity from nonrenewable
sources with renewably generated energy.
- "Tackling
greenhouse gases" -
Operators of digital infrastructure must have a greenhouse gas emissions
reduction goal that takes into account Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions - and
they must report these reductions in accordance with agreed policy.
- "IT efficiency: the critical core of digital
sustainability" - A digital sustainability
strategy should incorporate both the facilities and IT operations, even
for colocation operators. This report covers strategies, software tools
and metrics that can help drive up IT efficiency.
- "Navigating regulations and standards" - Critical digital infrastructure is subject to an
expanding set of regulations, directives and standards, with varying
levels of maturity and acceptance. Most are voluntary, but more are
becoming mandatory.
- "Three sustainability elements: water, the circular
economy and siting" - This
report discusses three important elements of the sustainability strategy:
water use; siting, including design and certification; and reuse,
disposal, and recycling. Addressing these elements can significantly
reduce the environmental impact of digital infrastructure.
- "Glossary of digital infrastructure sustainability" - This document explains the key terms used by those
defining, regulating, and applying digital infrastructure sustainability
strategies.