Green IT benefits from economic slowdown

By siliconindia   |   Tuesday, 14 July 2009, 17:57 IST   |    1 Comments
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Green IT benefits from economic slowdown
Bangalore: The current global economic downturn has squeezed IT budgets, hindered capital expenditure and generally slowed the growth of IT development. However, according to a report published by independent market analyst Datamonitor, 'Can Green IT Bloom in an Economic Downturn', it may also prove to be a significant upside to the market for green IT. "The global economic recession has spurred a paradigm shift in the way organizations evaluate, budget for and deploy green IT," says Rhonda Ascierto, Senior Analyst at Datamonitor and the report's author. "The downturn has also resulted in green IT trends for datacenters, client devices and asset lifecycle management, as well as re-shaped return on investment (ROI) models," Ascierto added. Current green IT investments are driven by compliance with environmental legislation and cost savings. In particular, green IT that eliminates the need for capital expenditure (capex), such as datacenter virtualization, datacenter design and layout, and asset lifecycle management, has become increasingly important as IT budgets remain constrained. Datamonitor research shows IT budgets are likely to remain flat in 2009, which means cost-effective green IT is likely to increase in demand. As such, organizations no longer regard green IT and cost-effective IT as being mutually exclusive. This represents a significant paradigm shift and bodes well for the future evolution of the global green IT market. Restrained IT budgets also mean that green ROI models are becoming compulsory and shorter. In order for green IT vendors to satisfy new ROI requirements, they are being forced to develop more efficient and greener IT solutions. Flat IT budget growth also means that organizations that face critical datacenter limitations, such as a shortage of floor or rack space, are looking to software or outsourcing alternatives to building new datacenters or upgrading existing facilities. Those alternatives include IT leasing, managed services, virtualization software, cloud computing and software-as-a-service (SaaS). However, the greatest demand for green IT implementation in datacenters will be for datacenter virtualization. Datacenter virtualization is becoming more holistic, whereby various assets, including servers, storage, communications infrastructure, and business applications, are being virtualized across a pool of datacenter hardware. Datamonitor believes business applications are the next frontier of datacenter virtualization.