Title :
Capping the brown energy consumption of Internet services at low cost
Author :
Le, Kien ; Bianchini, Ricardo ; Nguyen, Thu D. ; Bilgir, Ozlem ; Martonosi, Margaret
Author_Institution :
Rutgers Univ., Piscataway, NJ, USA
Abstract :
The large amount of energy consumed by Internet services represents significant and fast-growing financial and environmental costs. Increasingly, services are exploring dynamic methods to minimize energy costs while respecting their service-level agreements (SLAs). Furthermore, it will soon be important for these services to manage their usage of “brown energy” (produced via carbon-intensive means) relative to renewable or “green” energy. This paper introduces a general, optimization-based framework for enabling multi-data-center services to manage their brown energy consumption and leverage green energy, while respecting their SLAs and minimizing energy costs. Based on the framework, we propose a policy for request distribution across the data centers. Our policy can be used to abide by caps on brown energy consumption, such as those that might arise from Kyoto-style carbon limits, from corporate pledges on carbon-neutrality, or from limits imposed on services to encourage brown energy conservation. We evaluate our framework and policy extensively through simulations and real experiments. Our results show how our policy allows a service to trade off consumption and cost. For example, using our policy, the service can reduce brown energy consumption by 24% for only a 10% increase in cost, while still abiding by SLAs.
Keywords :
Internet; computer centres; energy consumption; optimisation; power aware computing; Internet services; brown energy consumption; energy costs; environmental costs; financial costs; green energy; multidata-center services; optimization; renewable energy; service-level agreements; Carbon; Electricity; Energy consumption; Green products; Optimization; Servers; Time factors;
Conference_Titel :
Green Computing Conference, 2010 International
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7612-1
DOI :
10.1109/GREENCOMP.2010.5598305