From: www.itworld.com

Interview with Dave O’Hara of Green Datacenter Blog

October 7, 2008 —

 

Robert Elsenpeter, one of the co-authors of our new book, “Green IT: Reduce Your Information System's Environmental Impact While Adding to the Bottom Line” recently spoke with Dave O’Hara of Green Datacenter Blog. Here, in Robert's own words, is the fruit of his conversation with Dave:

With the advent of Green IT there are numerous industries and jobs that will be created. Perhaps one of the first will be the Green Sherpa -- someone to guide you to the summit of your Green IT mountain.

I had the great opportunity to speak with one such Sherpa last week -- Dave O’Hara. If you have been considering greening your IT department, a guy like Dave is the person to talk to. Dave specializes in consulting on Green IT matters, and is the sort of person that can help guide you through the process.

While you can certainly take the initiative and do all your organization’s greening on your own, if you aren’t sure where to start, a consultant can help you make thoughtful changes.

Dave said that his consulting company (you can read his blogs at www.greenm3.com) was a natural extension of his work experience. He worked on Windows power management for Microsoft, and then worked on the hardware side for Apple and HP power supplies. One of the most interesting things he had to share is where the biggest field is in terms of adopting green processes. I went into it with the mindset that the biggest adopters would be chain stores, like Wal Mart or something like that. Not so. It turns out the biggest adopters are colleges and universities.

As we talked, the reasons turned out to be real no-brainers:

I also asked Dave where he sees the biggest obstacle to greening an IT department, and he observed that people are set in their ways. So in order to make serious change, there has to be a buy in that these changes are necessary. The IT manager has to realize that half a dozen redundant systems are not necessary and that the datacenter doesn’t have to be so cold that you can hang meat in it.

This ties back into the prevalence of colleges and universities being big Green IT adopters. Those processes are going to change as students move into “the real world” and start making their own impact on corporate culture.

Greening your IT department (and your organization) is tough to do, especially because we tend to see just one part of the machine and only responsible for one part of the machine. In order to make change, we have to be able to look at the whole thing and make broad changes.

That being said, you don’t need to uproot your whole organization (or the IT department for that matter) to make change. As Dave noted, being green is a willingness to make constant change. Make a few small changes for the better, and then keep making forward momentum.

- Bobb Elsenpeter, www.GreenITinfo.com