EDITOR’S CHOICE u SCHNEIDER ELECTRIC
Schneider Electric announces second edition of its Data Centre Sustainability Metrics
Reporting Framework Schneider Electric has revealed a revised, standardised environmental metrics-reporting framework with business- critical updates to help companies improve benchmarking and reach sustainability goals
S
purred by the rising information processing demands of AI and machine learning, the data centre industry is
tasked with undergoing rapid growth to support these new technology advancements, while reducing its environmental impact to net- zero to meet global climate pledges. This is a revision of the original whitepaper published in November 2021, which was created to support and advance the data centre industry by providing standardised metrics for reporting sustainability.
It was the first-of-its-kind Data Centre
Environmental Sustainability Metric Framework. Schneider Electric takes sustainability seriously and requested customer and industry association feedback in 2023, which contributed to publishing this latest revision of the whitepaper.
Comprised of 28 key sustainability metrics
in five categories: energy, greenhouse gas emissions, water, waste, and local ecosystem, the recommended standardised data-driven approach is outlined in a revised whitepaper available for download here.
Since data centre companies are at different stages in their sustainability journey, the whitepaper outlines the metrics across three reporting stages: beginning, advanced, and leading.
The beginning stage has six metrics that
represent basic reporting for energy, water use, and Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emission – the
core metrics required for every data centre. The advanced stage includes more detailed metrics for energy, water, GHG emissions, and introduces two new categories including waste and local ecosystem; the leading stage adds even more detailed metrics to the existing categories. Pankaj Sharma, executive vice president,
Secure Power Division and Data Centre Business at Schneider Electric, said: “Data centre operators are using a variety of different metrics making it harder to compare and benchmark sustainability progress and performance. “We need a standardised data-driven
approach to align on where to improve and what to prioritise, as well as ways to identify and root out organisational reporting discrepancies in order to meet the expectations of stakeholders and governmental pledges. Through more credible and comparable data, we will be able to establish industry benchmarks for others to make valuable environmental changes. “Without a unilateral approach to reporting, data centre organisations are at risk of losing vital time and efforts as regulatory requirements continue to grow in importance.
16 October 2023 Irish Manufacturing
www.irish-manufacturing.com
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