Uptime Institute and U.S. Department of Energy Announce 2009 Winners of Esteemed Green Enterprise IT Awards at LEAN, CLEAN, and GREEN Symposium
AOL, eNation and MassMutual Among Winners Recognized for Outstanding Initiatives and Leadership in Data Center Energy Efficiency
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today at the 4th Annual Institute Research Symposium: LEAN, CLEAN, and GREEN, the Uptime Institute and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), announced the winners of the Green Enterprise IT Awards (GEIT), which honors companies that have made significant strides in creating reliable, sustainable and energy-efficient data centers. Thomas L. Friedman, Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist and best-selling author, delivered the keynote address at tonight’s awards ceremony.
“As rapidly growing data center energy consumption impedes our economy, the national energy supply, security and the environment, it is crucial that we emphasize awareness of this challenge and encourage the industry to come together to solve it”
The 2009 GEIT Awards winners are:
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Data Center Energy Efficiency Improvement: IT
- AOL: AOL Enterprise-Wide Data Center Optimization Project
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Data Center Energy Efficiency Improvement: Joint IT and Facilities
- MassMutual Financial Group: MassMutual “Green IT Initiatives”
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Data Center Facility Design
- eNation Corporation: Integrated Design of Green High-Density Data Center
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Energy Efficient Products: Facilities
- Verari Systems: Containerized Green Data Center Technology
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Energy Efficient Products: IT
- APC by Schneider Electric: InRow Products with Active Response Controls & Integrated Thermal Containment
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Green IT Beyond the Data Center
- University of Notre Dame Center for Research Computing: Grid Heating Clusters
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Data Center Energy Efficiency Improvement: Facilities
- UniCredit Group: Free Cooling in Munich Data Center
The 2009 GEIT Awards program honors organizations that have distinguished themselves through innovative models for reducing energy consumption in their data centers. GEIT Awards winners have gone beyond instituting established industry best practices to implementing cutting-edge green IT systems. The Institute introduced the GEIT Awards program in 2008 to create institutional awareness that IT energy efficiency can enhance bottom-line profitability, while meaningfully reducing the overall corporate carbon footprint.
“As rapidly growing data center energy consumption impedes our economy, the national energy supply, security and the environment, it is crucial that we emphasize awareness of this challenge and encourage the industry to come together to solve it,” said Kenneth G. Brill, executive director of the Uptime Institute, a Santa Fe, N.M.-based research think-tank and advisory to owners and operators of the world's largest enterprise data centers on the technical and business issues of computing reliability, sustainability and energy efficiency. “With the GEIT Awards, industry has a valuable opportunity to highlight excellence and learn from each other’s successes.”
At the Symposium, winning companies presented case studies of their successful initiatives in data center energy efficiency, thus encouraging their peers to be advocates of change in their own organizations.
For more information about the GEIT Awards judges and the judging criteria, please visit: http://uptimeinstitute.org/content/view/263/178/
For more information about the Institute’s 4th Annual Symposium, please visit: http://www.uptimeinstitute.org
About the Uptime Institute:
The Uptime Institute is a leading independent think-tank, corporate advisor, knowledge exchange, education and professional-services provider, serving the owners and operators of the world’s largest enterprise data centers. Its primary area of expertise is the uptime availability, reliability, and resiliency of enterprise computing within formal critical computing environments--computer rooms, server farms and ranches, and data centers. The Institute operates a private knowledge network, the Site Uptime Network that conducts research, benchmarking, knowledge sharing, and best practices for its members, who represent 100 of the largest data center owning/operating institutions in the world. The Institute’s intellectual property base includes the de facto industry standard for data-center design, known as the Tiers Classification System and the Four Metrics for Determining a Green Data Center.