Reducing emissions from technology
Barclays is saving energy and reducing costs with innovative approaches to technology.
Data centres
It’s an ongoing challenge to keep our data centres, which are densely packed with servers that emit high levels of heat, suitably cooled and operating continuously and efficiently.
In 2009, we completed a pioneering project at our data centre in Gloucester, UK. We implemented an innovative ice store-linked cooling system, which saves energy used to produce chilled water and will reduce the site's carbon emissions by 10,750 tonnes of CO2 annually once fully operational. The data centre has since been awarded a series of environmental accolades including recognition from the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System, and a prestigious ‘Excellent’ rating from BREEM (Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method).
In the US, our investment bank is consolidating eight data centres into four key sites. The move is set to reduce overall electricity consumption by approximately 4.4 per cent.
And in Singapore, a programme to review data centre cooling has led to the server air intake temperature being raised by 2˚C. This has resulted in a 37 per cent decrease in the energy required to chill the water used for cooling.
Power consumption
Other key ways in which Barclays is reducing wasted energy include the introduction of ‘Nightwatchman’ software in 2010. The software allows UK desktop computers in Barclays Retail and Business Banking division to be automatically switched off overnight when not required.
The project offers twin benefits: reduced power consumption costs and a reduction in carbon emissions. If results of the UK trial prove encouraging, Nightwatchman could be implemented across every desktop computer in our Retail and Business Banking division worldwide.
In one of the UK’s largest such projects in the financial services sector, Barclays is also introducing compact computers across the business, to reduce power consumption. Desk PCs will be replaced with smaller devices, known as a ‘thin clients’, which typically use less than 10 per cent of the power of a standard PC. Applications will run from a remotely located server, while all the other hardware, such as the screen, keyboard and mouse, remain unchanged.
In Spain, Barclays launch of thin client workstations across the Retail and Business Banking division has been awarded financial support from the Spanish government, recognising the programme’s significant contribution to energy savings.
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