<!DOCTYPE article PUBLIC "-//NLM//DTD JATS (Z39.96) Journal Archiving and Interchange DTD v1.0 20120330//EN" "JATS-archivearticle1.dtd">
<article xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">
  <front>
    <journal-meta />
    <article-meta>
      <contrib-group>
        <aff id="aff0">
          <label>0</label>
          <institution>University of Manchester United</institution>
          <country>Kingdom</country>
        </aff>
      </contrib-group>
      <abstract>
        <p>- The workshop on Energy Efficient Systems (EES), in its second year, was organized by the EC (FP7) ECO2Clouds project. EES primarily focuses on energy efficiency in ICT systems with the extended scope of systems or technological solutions that may be supported by ICTs. The purpose of EES is to bring together research and industrial efforts focusing on achieving energy efficiency and to discuss ways innovative ideas of mutual interest. This year the workshop on EES was collocated with the 2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability. This report presents an overview of the workshop, the paper presented and the discussions that took place during the workshop.</p>
      </abstract>
      <kwd-group>
        <kwd>energy efficiency</kwd>
        <kwd>cloud</kwd>
        <kwd>ECO2Clouds</kwd>
      </kwd-group>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <sec id="sec-1">
      <title>I. INTRODUCTION</title>
      <p>Recently energy consumption and environmental
implications of ICT are getting more and more attention with
the CO2 footprint of ICT estimated to be touching 4% of EU’s
total CO2 emissions. This brings ICT in line with the airline
industry in terms of volume of CO2 emissions. The
transparency in measuring ICT’s energy consumption and the
pursuit for energy efficient technological solutions can enable
users to make informed choices when using digital
technologies and consequently deliver huge impact on lowering
the energy consumption and environmental implications of
using ICT-based solutions. In this respect, there is an ever
increasing need for innovative solutions to address the issues
concerning energy consumption and CO2 emissions at different
levels of ICT. Some of the areas where the above issues can be
addressed include CO2 awareness at application design and
deployment phases, development of energy and CO2 aware
monitoring tools and mechanisms, energy aware modelling and
management of ICT resources and increased transparency of
energy mix that goes into the underlying ICT infrastructure.</p>
      <p>In this background, the Workshop on Energy Efficient
Systems at International Conference on ICT for Sustainability
(ICT4S) (Stockholm, August 2014) provided participants from
academia and industry an opportunity to present and discuss
Copyright © Usman Wajid. Copying permitted only for
private and academic purposes. This volume is published and
copyrighted by its editors.
current initiatives targeting energy efficiency and CO2
emissions in the cloud as well as in the wider ICT domain
Cloud computing gets special attention here because the sheer
size of cloud infrastructures and datacentres makes them the
biggest stakeholders in the ICT domain. The workshop was
organised by the European Commission (EC) funded
ECO2Clouds (Experimental Awareness of CO2 in Federated
Cloud Sourcing) project. ECO2Clouds aims to develop a CO2
aware solution for the deployment and management of
workloads on cloud infrastructure that can ensure best
energyperformance ratios. The project particularly focuses on
federated cloud infrastructure where applications may span
over different cloud sites making it relatively difficult to track
their energy consumption and CO2 footprint as compared to
when they are deployed at one cloud site.</p>
      <p>This workshop report presents the overview of 5 research
papers presented in the workshop on Energy Efficient Systems
along with the summary of discussions that took place during
the session.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-2">
      <title>II. OVERVIEW OF PAPERS</title>
      <p>The papers presented in the workshop on Energy Efficient
Systems addressed energy efficiency and CO2 issues in
different areas of ICT with particular focus on cloud
computing.</p>
      <p>The paper Eco-efficient Cloud Resource Monitoring and
Analysis presented an approach for saving energy and reducing
the Carbon footprint of cloud infrastructure. The resource
monitoring and analysis approach, implemented in the
ECO2Clouds project, enables specification and collection of
specific metrics at physical infrastructure (testbed and hosts)
and virtualization (VM) levels. The metrics currently
implemented in ECO2Clouds enable quantification of energy
consumption and Carbon footprint at the above mentioned two
levels. The data collected by the monitoring approach is stored
in a database for later use. The paper also provides an overview
of a Data Mining service that uses the stored data to perform
analytical operations that may help in the application
deployment or resource utilization decision making.</p>
      <p>The paper Eco-reports in Clouds provides an overview of a
reporting mechanism for cloud computing. The reporting
mechanism enables presenting to the user the information
about the environmental impact of their cloud applications. The
reporting mechanism also supports the goal of informing users
about different operations that may have been performed
during the execution of their cloud application to satisfy their
non-functional requirements and to optimize their energy
consumption and Carbon footprint.</p>
      <p>The paper Load Balancing to Save Energy in Cloud
Computing introduces two algorithms for efficient resource
utilization in cloud computing. The algorithms aim to minimize
the wastage of cloud resources as a result of under-utilization
of some resources, and minimize lengthy response times as a
result of over utilization, where both cases contribute towards
excess energy consumption by the underlying resources. The
experimental evaluation of the two algorithms reveals their
strengths and weaknesses as one might be performing better
than the other in any given context.</p>
      <p>The paper Energy Efficiency Embedded Service Lifecycle:
Towards an Energy Efficient Cloud Computing Architecture
argues the need to provide novel methods and tools to support
software developers aiming to optimise energy efficiency and
minimise the carbon footprint resulting from designing,
developing, deploying and running software in clouds. Based
on the ongoing work in the EC funded ASCETiC (Adapting
Service lifecycle towards Efficient Clouds) project, the paper
provides an overview of a cloud architecture that can support
energy efficiency at service construction, deployment and
operations. The cloud architecture enables adequate support for
energy efficiency at different layers such as IaaS, PaaS and
SaaS.</p>
      <p>The paper A Look at Energy Efficient System Opportunities
with Community Network Clouds describes community
networking as an emerging model of shared communication
infrastructure that can support interconnection and
interoperation of shared resources within different
communities. The introduction of cloud computing in
community networks is the focus of Clommunity project,
described in the paper. In this respect, community clouds can
be seen as a set of federated micro-clouds that can be
composed of diverse resource pool ranging from desktops to
small data canters interlinked within a specific (community)
cloud framework. The heterogeneity of resources in
community cloud offers greater choices for the allocation of
suitable (e.g. energy efficient) resources to user application
based on an energy model of available resources. In this
respect, the paper discusses different options to enable energy
efficiency in community clouds in order to realise support for
energy efficient systems in community clouds and to foster
collaboration with other related initiatives.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>III. DISCUSSIONS</title>
      <p>After the paper presentations, the workshop participants
were given time to discuss their point of view concerning the
state of energy efficient systems and what lies ahead in the
future. The discussions that took place during the workshop on
Energy Efficient Systems were focused on the following four
main topics:</p>
      <p>Energy efficient systems – target domains and potential
impact: The workshop participants expressed diverse opinion
about the target domains and the scope of potential energy
efficient systems. Target areas for achieving energy efficiency
were narrowed down to buildings and cloud computing
infrastructure. Due to the growing number of datacentres
maximizing green energy utilization in this area can make a
substantial impact both financially and in terms of
environmental implications. Also the location and design of
building can impact on the energy consumption of a datacentre
e.g. reduced cooling overhead of physical servers. Another
aspect discussed was the consumer behaviour concerning the
use of different devises for performing ICT operations e.g.
from desktops, laptops to tablets and smartphones. Rapid
technological advances mean the lifespan of these devices is
getting smaller; however their CO2 footprint in terms of R&amp;D,
manufacturing, logistics and recycling operations stays the
same. Hence somehow increasing the lifespan of these devices
can also contribute towards lowering the CO2 footprint in the
ICT domain. Furthermore, the potential impact of energy
efficiency efforts in the above areas can result not only in
financial gains but also open the way for technological
innovations e.g. sensors for energy and CO2 measurements at
micro level and new ways for machines to community within
buildings. Lastly, monitoring of energy consumption and
environmental impact was deemed quite important since the
development of effective monitoring techniques and
mechanisms can have second order effect on any other system.</p>
      <p>Energy efficiency motives – cost, environment and/or
efficiency: The motives for energy efficiency can be different at
developer (of technological solutions) level and at organization
level. The discussions in the workshop unanimously concluded
that at organization level cost is the most important factor or
motive for achieving energy efficiency and environmental
concerns can follow from that. On the other hand, for
technology developers efficiency is the top priority and as a
consequence it can translate to energy saving and other
benefits. However, some participants placed less emphasis on
efficiency and linked it to the second order effect of quality
assurance. Environmental aspects are currently only reserved to
a limited section of society and therefore depended on
individual commitments or enforcement by regulatory
authorities.</p>
      <p>State of art – what’s new, What’s missing: Here the
workshop participants had a lot to say about what’s currently
missing e.g. the discussions revealed that based on the low
levels of awareness about environmental implications, lack of
standardisation and best practices the commercial drive for
ecofriendliness is currently not there to realise full
commercialisation potential of energy efficiency systems at
large. In this respect, establishment of new regulatory and
standardization measures and code of conduct can be an
important step. In terms of new developments, distributed
resource utilization and ease of access enabled by cloud
computing is a step forward from traditional networking
topologies and grid. This new connectivity and access model
can allow investigation of new ideas and techniques for service
delivery while considering different aspects such as energy
efficiency and, cost reductions.</p>
      <p>ECO2Clouds Usefulness – new or innovative ideas, future
potential: Finally, this topic was focused on gathering general
opinion about the ECO2Clouds project based on the three paper
presentations highlighting various aspects of the project earlier
in the workshop. The participants discussed the different
features of ECO2Clouds project particularly the CO2
measurements at different levels of cloud infrastructure. For
participants new ideas developed in ECO2Clouds also included
the awareness of energy mix and its utilization in the decision
making model and control mechanisms. In terms of future
potential of ECO2Clouds ideas, the discussions raised the
various issues that can hold back any technological
advancements in the area of energy efficiency these included
varying level of support and regulatory measures concerning
CO2 emissions e.g. dynamic energy mix information is not
available in Germany and in France the regulations are in place
for CO2 audit of companies but there are no penalties yet.
However, the advancements made in the project were deemed a
step in the right direction.</p>
      <p>Further, the workshop participants noticed that the research
in the area of energy efficiency was making its way towards
mainstream technologies and influencing different sects of
industrial solutions e.g. some cloud service providers are
pitching the use of green energy sources as their main
marketing messages. However, further research,
standardisation and clarity of existing regulatory measures can
help boost the awareness about energy efficient solutions and
ensure transparency across different levels of the market.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>IV. SUMMARY</title>
      <p>With rapid expansion of ICT infrastructures and increasing
popularity of cloud computing the topic of energy efficiency
and CO2 emissions has been getting profound attention owing
firstly to the growing financial pressure on infrastructure
providers to reduce energy related costs and secondly due to
the environmental policies and ‘green’ measures from
governments and other regulatory authorities (such as
European Commission) that impose levies on CO2 emissions
from corporate infrastructures. With this upbeat of
environmental concerns at different levels; for datacentre and
cloud infrastructure providers addressing energy efficiency and
CO2 footprint concerns will become as bigger challenge as
maintaining quality-of-service. Furthermore, in such
competitive and volatile market consumer awareness also plays
a key role in shifting market orientation. Thus environmental
awareness and pressure by regulatory authorities (such as EC)
can influence consumers’ selection criteria for ICT services,
adding more pressures for datacentres and cloud service
providers to do more!</p>
      <p>In this respect, the workshop on Energy Efficient Systems
in the ICT4S conference provided a unique opportunity to
bring together different stakeholders at a single platform. The
overview of the accepted papers from the workshop shows a
focus on the important issues in the ICT domain and also on
the innovative techniques and prospective ideas to address
these issues. Finally, interested researchers and practitioners
are invited to look at the workshop papers in the ICT4S
workshop proceedings at http://ceur-ws.org.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>V. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT</title>
      <p>The workshop on Energy Efficiency Systems at ICT4S
conference has been supported by the ECO2Clouds project
(http://eco2clouds.eu/) and has been partly funded by the
European Commission’s IST activity of the 7th Framework
Program under contract number 318048.</p>
    </sec>
  </body>
  <back>
    <ref-list />
  </back>
</article>