Bringing Energy Efficiency to
Silicon Valley—
and Our Customers
As a leader in the
utility industry, PG&E works with a number of companies to help them
advance energy-efficient products and services. One of our most fruitful
partnerships has brought us together with Sun Microsystems. Last year,
we certified Sun's new energy-efficient servers and created a purchaser
rebate plan for the computers. This innovative program has helped spur
sales for Sun's cutting-edge servers, reduced energy use in technology
data centers and motivated other major computer manufacturers to embrace
energy efficiency—which will ultimately benefit PG&E's customers,
California's and the country's economy and the environment.
Mark Bramfitt, a principal program manager at
PG&E, is responsible for the breakthrough relationship with Sun. He
also reaches out to three key industries—high-technology, healthcare
and biotechnology—in an effort to design and develop energy-efficiency
programs that will make a real difference for PG&E customers.
Dave Douglas, Vice President for Eco Responsibility
at Sun, joined forces with PG&E and oversees the computer maker's
environmental and sustainability efforts.
Is the
technology sector gobbling up a disproportionate share of energy?
Bramfitt: Information technology is still growing
rapidly and the data centers are crowded with computers. There's not a
lot of cooling or air flow in these critical places and the power
capacity is being stretched significantly. PG&E serves Silicon
Valley. We wanted to offer technology executives some sort of help here.
Our customers need our best solutions.
Douglas:
The technology industry is in an interesting spot today. Our products
are essential to economic growth—whether they help optimize supply
chains, stimulate productivity or enable e-business. But computers use
lots of energy. So we are part of the solution and part of the problem.
At Sun, our goal is to maximize technology's possible uses and minimize
its negative impacts. Energy reduction is a big part of that. And that's
why we initially raised awareness about the importance of energy
efficiency in late 2005. We've tried to carry this through to our
products since then.
What does the PG&E—Sun
partnership really mean?
Bramfitt: Sun is
clearly a leader. They saw these issues early and began designing an
energy-efficient server. This has changed the way the technology
industry thinks. It's changed the standards. Before, it was how fast and
how big the computer was. Now, it's how fast, how big and how energy
efficient. People are thinking about cooling and capacity today because
of Sun.
Last year, we certified Sun's new energy-efficient
servers and created a purchaser rebate plan for the computers. This
innovative program has helped spur sales for cutting-edge servers,
reduced energy use in data centers and motivated other major computer
manufacturers to embrace energy efficiency—which will ultimately benefit
PG&E's customers, California's and the country's economy and the
environment.
Douglas: PG&E has tremendous
vision and has exercised tremendous leadership on the energy-efficiency
issue. We couldn't do this alone. Mark and his team are using incentives
to steer people toward technology products that make sense in today's
environment. Our Sun Fire T1000 and T2000 servers are powered by our
Ultra SPARC T1 processor. This combination means the servers can do a
lot at once, operate even faster and still burn less power.
In terms of energy efficiency, is Sun influencing the
technology industry the way Toyota seems to be doing in the automotive
world?
Douglas: Toyota and Sun are both
investing in innovation to help address the energy-efficiency issue.
It's early, but are there any results stemming from
the PG&E-Sun alliance that we can report?
Bramfitt: At this point, we're running more than
four times ahead of projections for data-center energy savings. That's
incredibly encouraging.
Douglas: Our server line
is selling really well. We hit approximately $400 million in Sun Fire
T1000/T2000 sales for the last four reported quarters. And our
relationship with PG&E has led to a number of dialogues with other
utilities around the country.