Fifty percent of organisations will adopt sustainability-enabled monitoring by 2026, to manage energy consumption and carbon footprint metrics for their hybrid cloud environments, according to Gartner, Inc.
This is in response to pressure from investors, customers, regulators and governments, which is forcing organisations to adopt carbon neutrality and net zero goals by 2030.
“Organisations have strong carbon reduction goals to achieve and expect their infrastructure and operations (I&O) teams to launch sustainability initiatives that align their current IT carbon footprint with corporate goals,” said Padraig Byrne, VP Analyst at Gartner.
According to Gartner, the reporting of activities, energy usage, water efficiency and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in cloud and data centres will become new areas of IT management, resulting in new IT operating models (GreenOps) that will require new processes, capabilities and tools.
“I&O leaders and managed service providers will demand monitoring, analytical and generative AI services from software and cloud vendors to manage and optimise CO2e emissions and power consumption for reporting and IT management purposes,” said Byrne.
To satisfy this demand, monitoring vendors will evolve their portfolio of products and will enable new capabilities to track CO2e and power consumption across different IT layers – data centre, hardware, middleware and applications. According to Gartner, this will provide analytical capabilities and insights to optimise every type of workload.
Current adoption challenges
There are a number of adoption challenges for sustainability-enabled monitoring. Organisations that currently manage sustainability metrics use historic data and little to no real-time information, which can impact some real-time business decisions.
“Most relevant metrics aligned to net zero carbon are based on CO2e emissions and power consumption,” said Byrne. “However, IT organisations don’t currently have the capability to gather this information directly. Some request it from their IT providers, but the quality and granularity of information at the data centre and cloud account level aren’t accurate enough to rely on for good management decisions.”
Gartner analysts said there are a few processes and monitoring/observability tools specialised in the tracking of CO2e and power metrics at different IT levels (hardware, middleware, application, data centre, cloud, etc). However, this makes it difficult for I&O leaders to determine whether their environmental sustainability initiatives will succeed.
Current monitoring tools that address some of the sustainability metrics are mainly focused on on-premises environments, which makes it challenging to address these goals in current hybrid IT environments.
Journey to net zero
To overcome these challenges, Gartner recommends organisations adopt GreenOps or sustainability practices to start building the operating model that will help achieve carbon-neutral goals. Sustainability telemetry must also be collected and managed from their cloud providers, just as health performance and consumption cost telemetry are managed.
“This may not need to be acted on as urgently now, but treating those signals with equal importance positions organisations to benefit from real-time GHG emissions and power consumption optimisation when the capability becomes available,” said Byrne.
Gartner recommends I&O leaders explore and evaluate monitoring providers across a new set of metrics related to power consumption, power efficiency and CO2e emissions for IT infrastructures and verify their capabilities are valid for hybrid IT environments.