Efficiency drive moves to networks

29.10.2008

The people formulating ECR have talked about it with representatives of Cisco Systems, the dominant data networking vendor, which made some suggestions but didn't join the initiative, Ceuppens said. Cisco is leading discussions on energy efficiency efforts in standards bodies and other industry groups, including the ITU and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the company said in a statement.

The EPA welcomes the effort, according to Andrew Fanara, product development team leader in the agency's Energy Star division, who spoke at the event Tuesday.

"This is a very good first step and may become a formal standard," Fanara said. The EPA may try to create an Energy Star program for network devices in the future, but it has many other areas to look at, Fanara said.

IT vendors have to balance efficiency against many other demands in future products, said Vic Alston, senior vice president of product development at Ixia. Unlike in some businesses, such as consumer electronics, networking products are expected to improve tenfold in areas such as security, reliability, scalability and performance with every product cycle, Alston said. It's hard for vendors to justify sacrificing any of those improvements for efficiency, which doesn't give them a sexy specification to list on the product, he said.

The bad news of the economic downturn, along with the good news of lower oil prices, will further shift attention from power consumption, the EPA's Fanara predicted.