The future of U.S. computing is under a cloud — and that’s a good thing. A new report predicts that American companies will increase their adoption of cloud computing over the next decade from 10 percent to 70 percent of their information technology spend. The anticipated sky-high leap in cloud usage will be good for the planet, as well as bottom-line profitability, making it a win-win for environmentalists and economists alike.
In fact, by 2020, cloud adoption could save 85.7 million tons of carbon, equivalent to the annual emissions from 16.8 million passenger vehicles, anda 50 percent CO2 reduction versus no cloud at all. What’s more, the energy savings would total more than $12 billion annually for the 2,653 global firms with annual revenues in the United States above $1 billion.
The study, “Cloud Computing: The IT Solution for the 21st Century,” was conducted on behalf of the Carbon Disclosure Project(CDP) by the independent, London-based research firm Verdantix and sponsored by Dallas-based communications giant (and cloud provider) AT&T. The Carbon Disclosure Projectis an independent, nonprofit organization with headquarters in London that has amassed the largest database of primary corporate climate change information in the world.
What exactly is cloud computing? According to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), “Cloud computing is a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services).”
In addition to energy savings, cloud computing represents a way to:
Paul Stemmler from Citigroup commented: “Carbon reduction is one driver, but … the primary driver is time to market. Developers used to take 45 days to get new servers, but in the internal cloud infrastructure that we operate in our own private network, it takes just a couple of minutes.”
“The study results make a powerful case for businesses to continue to explore and adopt secure and flexible cloud computing solutions,” said John Potter, vice president, As-a-Service Solutions, AT&T (News - Alert).
The study makes the following recommendations to help companies maximize their cloud computing investments:
Verdantix conducted in-depth interviews with multi-national firms in diverse sectors including Aviva, Boeing, Citigroup, and Juniper Networks (News - Alert). All study participants had adopted cloud services for at least two years. Many of the firms interviewed reported cost savings as a primary motivator, with anticipated cost reductions as high as 40 percent to 50 percent.
For a full copy of the report, visit the Carbon Disclosure Project website.