About 50 percent of top executives across industries said that boosting sustainability is one of the highest priorities for their organization in the next two to three years, while a similar number of CEOs view sustainability as their greatest challenge given lack of data insights, technology barriers and uncertain return on investments, a recent study showed.
According to the IBM Institute for Business Value study, 48 percent of CEOs across industries said increasing sustainability is one of the highest priorities for their organization in the next two to three years. However, 51 percent also cited sustainability as among their greatest challenges in that same timeframe, with lack of data insights, unclear ROI, and technology barriers, as hurdles.
For these CEOs, scaling their business with modern infrastructure can often be one of the barriers to achieving sustainability goals, the study said.
As this developed, the leading US-based global hybrid cloud and AI, has offered a portfolio of sustainability technologies that includes solutions to design, deploy and manage energy efficient infrastructures and innovations with a hybrid cloud approach.
IBM LinuxONE is one solution within the portfolio designed to optimize data centers by reducing energy consumption and improving energy efficiency. IBM LinuxONE Emperor 4 will be generally available globally on Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2022, with entry and mid-range systems to follow in the first semester of 2023.
Shifts in the global economy have driven volatility and require flexibility in operational and technical decision-making. Built with the same security, scalability and reliability that has been the hallmark of IBM infrastructure, the next-generation LinuxONE also offers cloud-like flexibility. With a system built for rebalancing of resources in combination with on demand capacity, workloads can scale-up and scale-out dynamically and non-disruptively.
IBM LinuxONE Emperor 4 features capabilities that can reduce clients’ energy consumption. For example, consolidating Linux workloads on five IBM LinuxONE Emperor 4 systems instead of running them on compared x86 servers under similar conditions can reduce energy consumption by 75 percent, space by 50 percent, and the CO2e footprint by over 850 metric tons annually.
“Data centers are energy intensive, and they can account for a large portion of an organization’s energy use. But data and technology can help companies turn sustainability ambition into action,” said Marcel Mitran, IBM Fellow, CTO of Cloud Platform, IBM LinuxONE. “Reducing data center energy consumption is a tangible way to decrease carbon footprint. In that context, migrating to IBM LinuxONE is designed to help clients meet their scale and security goals, in addition to meeting sustainability goals for today’s digital business.”
IBM LinuxONE Emperor 4 is an engineered scale-out-on-scale-up system designed to enable clients to run workloads at sustained high density and increase capacity by turning on unused cores without increasing their energy consumption and associated greenhouse gas emissions.2 In addition, clients can track energy consumption with IBM Instana Observability on LinuxONE.
The new LinuxONE system also features pervasive encryption to protect data at-rest and in-flight, a priority for clients in regulated industries such as financial services. Building on IBM’s cloud security leadership in confidential computing, IBM LinuxONE Emperor 4 protects data in use while providing end-to-end encryption. This comprehensive data protection profile provides businesses with a data protection strategy that underpins current and anticipated future cyber security protocols.