Data Center Trends for 2022
Real Estate Market & Lifestyle | December 27, 2021 |

For specialists, the trends of the Data Center in 2022 will see a drastic acceleration in the measures related to dealing with the climate crisis and sustainability, as stated by Rob Johnson, CEO of Vertiv.

"For our part, we continue to focus on energy efficiency across our portfolio, as well as alternative and renewable energy technologies, and zero-carbon energy sources."

This, in order to prioritize water-free cooling technologies and partner with research leaders and customers to focus on meaningful sustainability efforts, the executive said.

For this reason, they consider that various trends will be marked throughout 2022, the first

cope with sustainability and the climate crisis, which is why this industry has taken steps in search of more climate-friendly practices, but operators will come together more resolutely in 2022.

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They are expected to adopt sustainable energy strategies using a digital solution that matches energy consumption with 100% renewable energy and operates on 24 × 7 sustainable energy.

The second trend is towards Artificial Intelligence (AI), which is driven by the complexity of the new networks that now have greater distribution under the demands of the augmented and virtual reality metaverse.

These factors require computing technologies and real-time decision making that will become more critical, which is why AI and machine learning will be critical to optimize the performance of different networks.

Post-pandemic data centers are already under construction and are designed with a value of 2.9 gigawatts, compared to 1.6 gigawatts in 2020, so they will be the first centers built to meet post-pandemic needs.

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Thus, more activity is anticipated at the edge of the network, where VMware projects a drastic change in the distribution of workloads, from the current 5% to 30% over the next 5 years.

Ultimately the drive towards integration will be the next step in integration as hubs collaborate with vendors to better integrate larger systems, for example all components of the power infrastructure, and deliver seamless interoperability.

The benefits of integration include lower construction and deployment costs, flexible capacity management, and applying the same approach to larger systems offers speed.

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