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Move to a Mainframe, Earn Carbon Credits

BBCWatcher writes "As Slashdot reported previously, Congress is pushing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to develop energy efficiency measures for data centers, especially servers. But IBM is impatient: Computerworld notes IBM has signed up Neuwing Energy Ventures, a company trading in energy efficiency certificates, in a first for "green" computing. Now if your company consolidates, say, X86 servers onto an IBM mainframe on top of slashing about 85% off your electric bill each megawatt-hour saved earns one certificate. Then you can sell the certificates in emerging carbon trading markets. IBM's own consolidation project (collapsing 3,900 distributed servers onto 30 mainframes) will net certificates worth between $300K and $1M, depending on carbon's market price. Will ubiquitous carbon trading discourage energy-inefficient, distributed-style infrastructure in favor of highly virtualized and I/O-savvy environments, particularly mainframes?"

2 of 316 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Carbon credits = lame by xaxa · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    My understanding is that this is the eventual aim, the price of carbon credits increases as time goes by, so gradually the solutions to the problems seem more cost-effective than buying carbon credits. Companies who lead the way get credits to sell. Power your mainframe with solar power and you'll win twice!

    If it works in the USA where nothing benefiting the environment works then it has to be good...

  2. Carbon credits is bullshit! by dinther · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I am getting sick to the gut from this carbon credit crap that is spouted all over the place. Doesn't anyone think any more these days? See: www.carbonhoax.org.nz