Oracle looks to Utah for green data center
Oracle will consolidate computing facilities from its many acquisitions in a remotely managed data center near Salt Lake City, partly to cut its second-largest data center cost: energy.
The enterprise software giant will break ground this month on the first phase of the Oracle Utah Compute Facility, which when completed will stretch one-quarter mile across a site in West Jordan, Utah, said Mark Sunday, Oracle's senior vice president and CIO, in a LinuxWorld keynote on Wednesday.
Thanks to dry outside air, high server density and containment of cooling, Oracle expects to achieve much more power efficiency than at its main data center in Austin, Texas, Sunday said. Utah's low humidity will help, but the cooling systems will be able to take advantage of outside air on days as hot as 85 degrees Fahrenheit (29 degrees Celsius), he said. Inside, heat will be pushed behind and above the server racks, concentrating the cooling on the equipment itself.
The center will be divided into four "supercells," each of which can be broken up into "subcells" that can be managed independently, Sunday said. Networking and power distribution gear will be separate from the supercells so computing power can be more concentrated within the data center. Each supercell will take up about 30,000 square feet but will have roughly the same computing capacity as the 88,000-square-foot Austin center, Sunday said. The power density will be three times as high, at about 300 watts per square foot (0.9 square meters).
Another benefit of separating the networking and power infrastructure is reducing foot traffic in the data center, which enhances security.
"It's pretty disruptive the way our Austin facility is designed. Our new facility is designed much more around being able to isolate the flow of individuals," Sunday said.
The new data center will allow Oracle to consolidate facilities that became part of Oracle's infrastructure because of its more than 50 acquisitions, Sunday said. Many of those were inefficient to maintain, he said.
"While our company's growing dramatically, we aren't consuming more power than we were roughly two years ago," Sunday said.
The Utah Compute Facility will be completely managed remotely, with more than 65 percent of its management staff located outside the U.S., according to Sunday. However, Oracle likes to keep its major data centers in the U.S. because of stable and relatively low-cost power, as well as security and good telecommunications infrastructure. Utah was chosen partly for land cost, power cost and its pro-business culture, as well as climate.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
- mburton325
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Sooner rather than later,
Sooner rather than later, this kind of energy efficiency planning/evaluation will even filter down into the market values for commercial real estate used for data centers. There's BIG savings at stake.Oracle isn't the first major ISV to look at this issue. And it certainly won't be the last.