Intelligent Data Centres Issue 07 | Page 22

INDUSTRY INTELLIGENCE POWERED BY THE DCA Surprisingly enough, the notion of a global data centre certification programme is a relatively recent concept. systems and this applies to business and consumer customers. There are of course other International Organisation for Standardisation (ISO) management standards that data centres can be certified to, such as the ISO9001 Quality Management, ISO14001 Environmental Management, ISO22301 Business Continuity, ISO27001 Information Security and finally ISO50001 Energy Management. Surprisingly enough, the notion of a global data centre certification programme is a relatively recent concept. These require a rigorous assessment of the who, what, where and how you conduct business in these areas, they take approximately six to 12 months to implement, depending on the size of the organisation and require day to day management. The costs to implement each standard is variable and depends on the size of the organisation and the complexity of the management system. Prior to this date, the only real certification that a data centre could seek to be compliant with was a US private companies grading system. The EN50600 series is under continual development but the core standards have been published and some are in their 2nd edition, the full suite is as follows: It wasn’t until 2010 that a truly comprehensive multi-disciplined data centre standard was started by the European Committee for Standardisation, the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardisation and the European Telecommunications Standards Institute also known as CEN/CENELEC/ETSI with the EN50600 standard. EN50600-1 – General concepts There had been other certifications such as the US Telecommunications Industry Association with its TIA942-A, although this was primarily focused on the network cabling topologies, with only brief details on the electro- mechanical elements. EN50600-2-5 Security systems So, what accreditation should a data centre (enterprise or colocation facility) be certified to? There was also the EU Code of Conduct for Data Centres (Energy Efficiency) aka EUCOC and its focus was clear, based on the forecast that data centres in Europe would use some 104TWh of electricity in 2020, from a baseline of 56TWh in 2007. Using the EUCOC and KPI Metrics developed by the Green Grid, the Certified Energy Efficient Data Centre Award (CEEDA) has assessed over 60 data centres globally since 2011. A list can be accessed online at ceedacert.com 22 Issue 07 EN50600-2-1 Building construction EN50600-2-2 Power distribution and supply EN50600-2-3 Environmental control EN50600-2-4 Telecommunications cabling infrastructure EN50600-3-1 Management and operational information There are also the EN50600-4-X series which relate to data centres’ key performance indicators (KPI’s) covering PUE, REF and others. There is also three technical reports (TR’s) covering energy efficiency, TR99-1 and Sustainability (TR99-2) and guidance (TR99-3). These standards have ‘conformance’ sections and it is possible to be assessed using these criteria but the official stance of CEN/CENELEC/ETSI is that there is no official certification programme authorised by them, but that they recognise that there are external certification bodies that can provide a certificate that states that the conformance criteria have been met. Their recommendation is that if you seek to be certified then your certifying body should be themselves assessed to ISO17021 and ISO17065 and be a member of an official national accreditation service. In the UK this body is United Kingdom Accreditation Service (UKAS). Due to the confusing landscape of data centre certifications globally, the Data Centre Alliance has, since 2015, provided an independent certification based upon the EN50600 series, the EUCOC and some additional requirements. This is explained in more detail below: The objectives of the DCA certification programme The purpose of the DCA certification scheme exists to provide an industry led, widely adopted recognition of a data centre’s designed purpose, its operational integrity, energy efficiency practices and www.intelligentdatacentres.com