Green Computing SEMINAR
Green Computing SEMINAR
Green Computing SEMINAR
COMPUTING
A Seminar Report Submitted to
BACHELOR OF TECHNOLOGY
IN
Submitted by
CHIDWILASINI BITRA
(18NA1A0506)
CERTIFICATE
We Hereby declare that the technical seminar report titled “PRESENT TREND IN
GREEN COMPUTING” is a Bonafede work carried out in Lingayas Institute of Management
and Technology, Madalavarigudem, Vijayawada, during the academic year 2021-2022 in
partial fulfillment of the requirement for the award of degree of Bachelor of Technology in
Computer Science and Engineering.
CHIDWILASINI BITRA
(18NA1A0506)
S. No DESCRIPTION Page No.
1 Abstract 2
2 CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION 3
3 1.1 Introduction 3
5 1.3 Objectives 5
22 References 23
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PRESENT TREND IN GREEN COMPUTING
Abstract
Green Computing is a recent trend towards designing, building, and operating computer systems to be
energy efficient. While programs such as Energy Star have been around since the early1990s, recent concerns
regarding global climate change and the energy crisis have led to renewed interest in Green Computing. Data
centers are a significant consumer of energy – both to power the computers as well as to provide the necessary
cooling. This paper proposes a new approach to reduce energy utilization in data centers. Our approach relies on
consolidating services dynamically onto a subset of the available servers and temporarily shutting down servers to
conserve energy. We present initial work on a probabilistic service dispatch algorithm that aims at minimizing the
number of running servers such that they suffice for meeting the quality of service required by service-level
agreements. Given the estimated energy consumption and projected growth in data centers, the proposed effort has
the potential to positively impact energy consumption.
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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Introduction
Green computing is the practice of using computing resources efficiently. The goals are to reduce
the use of hazardous materials, maximize energy efficiency during the product's lifetime, and promote
recyclability or biodegradability of defunct products and factory waste. Such practices include the
implementation of energy-efficient central processing units (CPUs), servers and peripherals as well
as reduced resource consumption and proper disposal of electronic waste (e- waste). In 1992, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency launched Energy Star, a voluntary labeling program which is
designed to promote and recognize energy-efficiency in monitors, climate control equipment, and
other technologies. This resulted in the widespread adoption of sleep mode among consumer
electronics. The term "green computing" was probably coined shortly after the Energy Star program
began; there are several USENET posts dating back to 1992 which use the term in this manner.
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1.2 Go Green Importance
Green computing is a very hot topic these days, not only because of rising energy costs and potential
savings, but also due to the impact on the environment. Energy to manufacture, store, operate, and cool
computing systems has grown significantly in the recent years, primarily due to the volume of systems and
computing that companies now heavily rely upon. Computing power consumption of companies has
reached a critical point. For example, an E-commerce business with 100,000 servers can easily spend up to
$20 million a year on server power. Add another $10 million for a/c cooling and it tops $30 million a year in
power alone. Clearly there is a huge potential for savings in their infrastructure.
Despite the huge surge in computing power demands, there are many existing technologies and
methods by which significant savings can be made. This series is dedicated to the ways a typical
organization can reduce their energy footprint while maintaining required levels of computing
performance.
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1.3 Objectives
Climate Change:
First and foremost, conclusive research shows that CO2 and other emissions are causing global
climate and environmental damage. Preserving the planet is a valid goal because it aims to preserve life.
Planets like ours, that supports life, are very rare. None of the planets in our solar system, or in nearby
star systems have m-class planets as we know them.
Savings:
Green computing can lead to serious cost savings over time. Reductions in energy costs from
servers, cooling, and lighting are generating serious savings for many corporations.
Reliability of Power:
As energy demands in the world go up, energy supply is declining or flat. Energy efficient
systems helps ensure healthy power systems. Also, more companies are generating more of their own
electricity, which further motivates them to keep power consumption low.
Computing Power Consumption Has Reached a Critical Point:
Data centers have run out of usable power and cooling due to high densities.
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CHAPTER 2
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2.2 What is GREEN COMPUTING?
Green computing is the study and practice of using computing resources efficiently. The
primary objective of such a program is to account an expanded spectrum of values and criteria
for measuring organizational (and societal) success. The goals are similar to green chemistry;
reduce the use of hazardous materials, maximize energy efficiency during the product‘s
lifetime, and promote recyclability or biodegradability of defunct products and factory waste.
Modern IT systems rely upon a complicated mix of people, networks and hardware; as
such, a green computing initiative must be systemic in nature, and address increasingly
sophisticated problems. Elements of such a solution may comprise items such as end user
satisfaction, management restructuring, regulatory compliance, disposal of electronic waste,
telecommuting.
2.2.1 Origin
In 1992, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency launched Energy Star, a voluntary
labeling program that is designed to promote and recognize energy-efficiency in monitors,
climate control equipment, and other technologies. This resulted in the widespread adoption of
sleep mode among consumer electronics. Concurrently, the Swedish organization TCO
Development launched the TCO Certification program to promote low magnetic and electrical
emissions from CRT-based computer displays; this program was later expanded to include
criteria on energy consumption, ergonomics, and the use of hazardous materials in
construction.
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2.2.2 At Present
Currently the ICT industry is responsible for 3% of the world ‘s energy consumption. With
the rate of consumption increasing by 20% a year, 2030 will be the year when the world ‘s energy
consumption will double because of the ICT industry.
Organizations use the Green Computing Lifecycle when designing and implementing
green computing technologies. The stages in the Lifecycle include Strategy, Design,
Implementation, Operations and Continual Improvements.
Many governmental agencies have continued to implement standards and regulations that
encourage green computing. The Energy Star program was revised in October 2006 to include
stricter efficiency requirements for computer equipment, along with a tiered ranking system for
approved products.
The 5 core green computing technologies advocated by GCI are Green Data Centre,
Virtualization, Cloud Computing, Power Optimization and Grid Computing.
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2.2.3 Roads to Green Computing
Green use:
Reducing the energy consumption of computers and other information systems as well as
using them in an environmentally sound manner
Green disposal:
Refurbishing and reusing old computers and properly recycling unwanted computers and
other electronic equipment
Green design:
Designing energy-efficient and environmentally sound components, computers, servers,
cooling equipment, and data centres.
Green manufacturing:
Manufacturing electronic components, computers, another associated subsystems with
minimal impact on the environment.
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2.3 Regulation Initiative
Many governmental agencies have continued to implement standards and regulations that
encourage green computing. The Energy Star program was revised in October 2006 to include
stricter efficiency requirements for computer equipment The European Union ‘s directives
2002/95/EC (RoHS), on the reduction of hazardous substances, and 2002/96/EC (WEEE) on
waste electrical and electronic equipment required the substitution of heavy metals and flame
retardants like PBBs and PBDEs in all electronic equipment put on the market starting on July
1,2006. The directives placed responsibility on manufacturers for the gathering and recycling of
old equipment (the Producer Responsibility model).
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2.5 Facts About Green Computing
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CHAPTER 3
ANALYSIS AND APPROACHES
Our so called technically successful world almost sounds fake. We have great machines and
equipment to accomplish our tasks, great gadgets with royal looks and features make our lives
more impressive and smoother. Today almost all streams weather its IT, medicine, transportation,
agriculture uses machines which indirectly requires large amount of power and money for its
effective functioning. Newton ‘s Third Law of Motion states that For every action, there is an
equal and opposite reaction. Therefore consumption of energy sources has a negative reaction on
the environment. Data centers use a large amount of power and consequently cooling energy is
needed to counteract the power usage. It can be an endless circle of energy waste Hence the Three
main reasons that made us realize the need for growing green are: -
3.2.1 Virtualization:
Computer Virtualization means abstraction of computer resources, such as the process of
running two or more logical computer systems on one set of physical hardware. Through
Virtualization, a system administrator can combine several physical systems into virtual machines
on one single, powerful system, thereby reducing power and cooling consumption. In the longer
run, more profits and less expenses.
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Figure 3.2.1: Virtualization
• Reducing the number of hardware components and replacing them with Green Computing
systems reduces energy costs for running hardware and cooling as well as reducing carbon
dioxide emissions and conserving energy.
• The phrase green computing may conjure up some humorous images if you ‘re not familiar
with the term. Normally, we think of gas guzzling cars, factories, pesticides, and such when
considering environmental concerns. So, what does the term green‖ signify in the context of
everyday computing?
• In a world where computers are everywhere, and environmental concerns are growing by the
day, we need to consider how we can build, use and dispose of computers in a manner that ‘s
conducive to the health of the environment. That includes reducing the use of lead and other
hazardous materials in manufacturing, being careful about energy consumption and paper
waste by computer users, and concern for salvage or recycling of old computers. Millions of
computers are dumped into landfills each year. That equates to a lot of lead, cadmium,
mercury and brominates flame retardants, which will contaminate both water and air.
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Figure 3.2.1: Component Wattage
The Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI), an open industry standard,
allows an operating system to directly control the power saving aspects of its underlying
hardware. This allows a system to automatically turn off components such as monitors and hard
drives after set periods of inactivity. In addition, a system may hibernate, where most components
(including the CPU and the system RAM) are turned off. ACPI is a successor to an earlier Intel-
Microsoft standard called Advanced Power Management, which allows a computer‘s BIOS to
control power management functions.
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3.2.4 Power Supply
Desktop computer power supplies (PSUs) are generally 70–75% efficient, dissipating the
remaining energy as heat. An industry initiative called 80 PLUS certifies PSUs that are at least
80% efficient; typically, these models are drop-in replacements for older, less efficient PSUs of
the same form factor. As of July 20, 2007, all new Energy Star 4.0-certified desktop PSUs must
be at least 80% efficient.
3.2.5 Storage
Smaller form factor (e.g., 2.5 inch) hard disk drives often consume less power per gigabyte
than physically larger drives.
Unlike hard disk drives, solid-state drives store data in flash memory or DRAM. With no moving
parts, power consumption may be reduced somewhat for low-capacity flash-based devices. Even
at modest sizes, DRAM-based SSDs may use more power than hard disks, (e.g., 4GB I-RAM uses
more power and space than laptop drives). Flash based drives are generally slower for writing
than hard disks.
3.2.6 Display
LCD monitors typically use a cold-cathode fluorescent bulb to provide light for the display.
Some newer displays use an array of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) in place of the fluorescent bulb,
which reduces the amount of electricity used by the display.
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3.2.8 Telecommuting
For a long time, there was no considerable improvement in the growth of indigenous
authentic hardware equipment manufacturer in the country and almost every companies and the
household customers were dependent on foreign companies who were either importing the
equipment or producing part of them in Indian subsidiaries.
Lack of basic research initiative and congenial infrastructure has resulted in absence of
good patents and commercial production of indigenously built equipment. Due to tax relief given
by the Government in the last few years for importing computer hardware accelerated the import
and resulted in the minimization of the machines, equipment and peripherals. In this situation
many small and medium scale industries were induced to start procuring the hardware at low
prices and venture into the building of IT infrastructure for the company. But during the activities
price was the most important criterion. At that point of time the basic objective was to build basic
infrastructure without considering the principle of green computing. In the later stage when at the
recent time the concept is grown enough it is not possible for most of the small and medium scale
companies to redo the task of IT infrastructure development over and above bearing the cost of
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maintenance and procurement of software.
Even with the old non green hardware it was observed that most of the boards (Around
73.78 % as found in local survey in and around Kolkata, Siliguri, ADDA) faced a question by the
stakeholders about the justification for the IT expenditure and they also insisted to calculate the
cost benefit ratio of the investment and unfortunately most of the boards failed to give good
answer due to confusion and initial fault in planning which resulted in the massive
underutilization of the equipment’s and failure of MID which was not very prudent and robust
with respect to the changing business dynamics.
So, in the backdrop of the above discussion, it can be concluded that most of the SMEs
will not be interested right now to change their IT infrastructure to green infrastructure. Even if
they are concerned about the concept they will wait until the cost is recovered from the old
infrastructure. Though when they procure any new equipment, they will have a choice of green
equipment but in that case also price will play a deterrent role decision-making. Regarding the
large companies and MNCs cost of procurement of new green equipment is not very tough but
again disposal of the old equipment is not a very easy task. Apart from this the problem of
homoeostasis of the employee is also a negative factor.
In India the IT backed business intelligence and operation is now in a growth phage and
the stakeholders are really concerned to maximize the return on investment and as a result of this
it will not be easy to implement the principle of green computing in the IT infrastructure.
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CHAPTER 4
Whilst the performance and the breadth of application of computers is increasing, so too is our
awareness of the cost and scarcity of the energy required to power them, as well as the materials
needed to make them in the first place. However, because computing developments can enable
individuals and businesses to adopt greener lifestyles and work styles, in terms of the
environmental debate computing is both part of the problem and part of the solution.
Through more environmentally aware usage (such as more effective power management and
shutdown during periods of inactivity), and by adopting current lower power technologies,
computers can already be made significantly more energy efficient. Indeed, just as we now look
back and wonder why automobiles a decade or two ago used to guzzle so much petrol, in a
decade's time we will no doubt be staggered that a typical desktop PC used to happily sit around
drawing 100-200W of power every hour night and day, and when accomplishing no more than
displaying a screensaver.
The computing industry is more prepared and far more competent than almost any other
industry when it comes to facing and responding to rapid change. Environmentally it is not a good
thing that most PCs especially in companies have typically entered a landfill after only a few
years in service. However, this reality does at least mean that a widespread mindset already exists
for both adapting to and paying money for new computer hardware on a regular basis.
Hence, whereas it took decades to get more energy efficient cars on the roads, it will hopefully
only take a matter of years to reach a situation where most computers are using far less power
than they needlessly waste today.
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4.2 Rules to follow:
As 21st century belongs to computers, gizmos and electronic items, energy issues will get a
serious ring in the coming days, as the public debate on carbon emissions, global warming and
climate change gets hotter. If we think computers are nonpolluting and consume very little energy,
we need to think again. It is estimated that out of $250 billion per year spent on powering
computers worldwide only about 15% of that power is spent computing- the rest is wasted idling.
Thus, energy saved on computer hardware and computing will equate tons of carbon emissions
saved per year. Taking into consideration the popular use of information technology industry, it
has to lead a revolution of sorts by turning green in a manner no industry has ever done before.
Opportunities lie in green technology like never before in history and organizations are seeing it
to create new profit centers while trying to help the environmental cause. The plan towards green
IT should include new electronic products and services with optimum efficiency and all possible
options towards energy savings.
Faster processors historically use more power. Inefficient CPUs are a double hit because they
both use too much power themselves and their waste heat increases air conditioning needs,
especially in server farms between the computers and the HVAC. The waste heat also causes
reliability problems, as CPU's crash much more often at higher temperatures. Many people have
been working for years to slice this inefficiency out of computers. Similarly, power supplies are
notoriously bad, generally as little as 47% efficient. And since everything in a computer runs off
the power supply, nothing can be efficient without a good power supply. Recent inventions of
power supply are helping fix this by running at 80% efficiency or better.
• ¾ landfills can be controlled by making best use of the device by upgrading and repairing
in time with a need to make such processes (i.e., upgradation and repairing) easier and
cheaper.
• ¾ avoiding the discarding will not only control e-waste out of dumps but also save energy
and materials needed for a whole new computer.
• ¾ power-sucking displays can be replaced with green light displays made of OLEDs, or
organic light-emitting diodes.
• ¾ use of toxic materials like lead can be replaced by silver and copper.
• ¾ making recycling of computers (which is expensive and time consuming at present)
more effective by recycling computer parts separately with a option of reuse or resale.
• ¾ future computers could knock 10 percent off their energy use just by replacing hard
drives with solid-state, or flash, memory, which has no watt-hungry moving parts.
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4.3 Steps To GREEN COMPUTING
As of Oct. 20, there are new performance requirements to qualify for the Energy Star rating
for desktop and notebook computers, workstations, integrated computers, desktop-derived servers
and game consoles. These specifications go into effect on July 20. But businesses don‘t have to
wait until then to initiate more environmentally-friendly computing practices. Here are five first
steps you can take toward a green computing strategy.
Develop a sustainable green computing plan:
Discuss with your business leaders the elements that should be factored into such a plan,
including organizational policies and checklists. Such a plan should include recycling policies,
recommendations for disposal of used equipment, government guidelines and recommendations
for purchasing green computer equipment.
Green computing best practices and policies should cover power usage, reduction of paper
consumption, as well as recommendations for new equipment and recycling old machines.
Organizational policies should include communication and implementation.
Recycle:
Discard used or unwanted electronic equipment in a convenient and environmentally
responsible manner. Computers have toxin metals and pollutants that can emit harmful emissions
into the environment. Never discard computers in a landfill. Recycle them instead through
manufacturer programs such as HP' Planet Partners recycling service or recycling facilities in your
community. Or donate still-working computers to a non-profit agency.
Reduce Paper Consumption:
There are many easy, obvious ways to reduce paper consumption: e-mail, electronic
archiving, use the track changes‖ feature in electronic documents, rather than red-line corrections
on paper. When you do print out documents, make sure to use both sides of the paper, recycle
regularly, use smaller fonts and margins, and selectively print required pages.
Conserve energy:
Turn off your computer when you know you won ‘t use it for an extended period of time.
Turn on power management features during shorter periods of inactivity.
Power management allows monitors and computers to enter low-power states when sitting idle.
By simply hitting the keyboard or moving the mouse, the computer or monitors awakens from its
low-power sleep mode in seconds. Power management tactics can save energy and help protect
the environment.
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CHAPTER 5
Conclusion
Adopting Green Computing Strategies make sense not only from an ethical, or moral stand-
point, but from a commercial standpoint. There are many business benefits achievable through the
implementation of a green computing strategy such as cost savings, resilience, disaster recovery,
business continuity planning and of course public relations. Given the prolific nature of IT within
today's information economy IT leaders have an excellent opportunity to significantly impact the
fight against global warming, whilst enhancing the business operation and efficiency.
Future work:
Faster processors historically use more power. Inefficient CPUs are a double hit because
they both use too much power themselves and their waste heat increases air conditioning needs,
especially in server farms between the computers and the HVAC. The waste heat also causes
reliability problems, as CPU's crash much more often at higher temperatures. Many people have
been working for years to slice this inefficiency out of computers.
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References
[1] http://igreenik.com/innovations/green-computing/green-computing/212/
[2] http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/featured/green-technologies-future/7228
[3] http://thefutureofthings.com/articles/1003/green-computing.html
[4] http://greenlivingideas.com/2008/02/12/whats-in-the-future-for-green-pcs/
[5] http://www.thinkdigit.com/latest/green_computing.html
[6]http://www.firstpost.com/topic/issue/green-computing-profile-84259.html
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