Openai/6912c307-1960-8008-80a2-508e249c7792
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gpt-5 edit
User: What is Power Usage Effectiveness PUE in a data centre, and why is a lower number better? edit
What is Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) in a data centre, and why is a lower number better?
Assistant: Power Usage Effectiveness PUE is a key metric used to measure how efficiently a data center uses energy. edit
Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) is a key metric used to measure how efficiently a data center uses energy. It is defined as:
PUE=Total Facility EnergyIT Equipment Energy\text{PUE} = \frac{\text{Total Facility Energy}}{\text{IT Equipment Energy}}PUE=IT Equipment EnergyTotal Facility Energy
- Total Facility Energy includes everything that powers the data center — servers, cooling systems, lighting, power distribution losses, etc.
- IT Equipment Energy refers only to the energy used by the computing equipment itself (servers, storage, and networking gear).
Example: edit
If a data center consumes 1,500 kWh in total and the IT equipment uses 1,000 kWh, then:
PUE=1500/1000=1.5PUE = 1500 / 1000 = 1.5PUE=1500/1000=1.5
Why a Lower PUE Is Better: edit
A lower PUE means that a greater proportion of the energy is going directly to running the IT equipment (the core purpose of the data center), rather than being wasted on cooling, lighting, or power conversion losses.
- PUE = 1.0 is ideal — it means all the energy is used by IT equipment with no overhead losses (though in practice this is nearly impossible).
- A high PUE (e.g., 2.0 or more) indicates inefficiency — for every 1 watt powering servers, another watt is wasted elsewhere.
In short, lower PUE = higher energy efficiency, lower operational costs, and a smaller environmental footprint.
References edit
- ↑ "Power Usage Effectiveness PUE". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-11-12.