abednarz
Executive Editor

Unused servers squander $25 billion a year

news
Oct 19, 20093 mins

A new report says 15 percent of servers aren't doing anything useful and are wasting energy

Millions of servers around the world are doing little more than wasting energy, according to a new study.

At least 15 percent of servers are not doing anything useful, said a majority (72 percent) of server managers polled by Kelton Research. In addition, 83 percent said they don’t have an adequate grasp of server utilization, and 72 percent rely on CPU utilization as their measure of server efficiency.

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The cost of unused servers is estimated at $24.7 billion a year, including the value of hardware, maintenance, management, energy and cooling for unused servers.

Five ways to cut back on data center power consumption

Specifically, the study concludes that an estimated 4.75 million servers worldwide are being run 24/7, managed and upgraded without being actively used on a daily basis. Assuming about $4,400 per server per year in operational costs (an IDC estimate), those unused servers cost $20.9 billion to run, plus consume another $3.8 billion in energy costs.

The study was conducted in September and commissioned by 1E (a vendor that offers software and services to help reduce enterprise IT costs and energy usage) in association with the Alliance to Save Energy.

“Very few datacenter managers or server managers are focused on decommissioning or getting rid of the servers that aren’t actually doing anything useful,” says Sumir Karayi, CEO of 1E.

Companies want to pay more attention to server efficiency and energy management, but they lack the tools and processes to do so, he says. For example, many rely on CPU utilization to gauge a server’s usefulness, but that’s a flawed approach.

“The problem with CPU utilization is that a server could be busy doing its housekeeping tasks, such as its own antivirus scans, its own backups, its own indexing and defragmenting of hard disks,” Karayi says. “It will look busy, but it’s not actually adding any business value.”

The study found more than half of server managers (63 percent) rely on manual checks, trial and error or wait until something is broken to find unused servers. In addition, 75 percent admit that their companies’ mandates to deliver high levels of IT service internally get in the way of measuring and improving server efficiency.

1E’s release of the study results coincides with its launch of its tool for monitoring server usage. NightWatchman Server Edition provides metrics around server efficiency and power usage to help companies determine which assets aren’t being used and can be decommissioned.

The software can conduct a work analysis to determine how much useful work a server is performing, the energy it’s consuming and whether there is any waste, for instance. With the Drowsy Server feature, IT administrators can opt to have idle servers put in a “drowsy” state that reduces energy consumption but doesn’t impact a server’s availability, Karayi says.

“Drowsy enables a server manager to make a server consume less power when it’s not doing useful work,’ he says. “We’re not making the server go into a standby or sleep state. The server is still working, it’s just running a bit slower.”

abednarz

Ann Bednarz is the executive editor of Network World. Ann is a longtime IT journalist and has spent 26 years writing and editing for Network World, where she has worked as a news reporter, managed product testing and reviews, and developed features and how-to articles for an audience of network professionals and data center managers. Over the last two years, she has conceived and edited award-winning content for Network World that includes 2025 Jesse H. Neal Award finalists, 2025 Azbee Award regional winners and national finalists, and 2024 Eddie & Ozzie Award finalists.

Ann holds a bachelor’s degree in architecture and spent the early part of her journalism career writing about architectural design and construction. In her free time, she keeps those skills alive through DIY projects.

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