News Releases - 2009
Date: 17 August 2009
Eaton Identifies Five Best Practices To Protect IT Infrastructure Against Seasonal Power Problems
RALEIGH, N.C. …In the midst of hurricane season, diversified industrial manufacturer Eaton
Corporation is sharing best practices to protect Information Technology (IT) infrastructure and
critical business systems from power disturbances. Many businesses overlook the risks
because it is easy to take IT and power systems for granted. Eaton offers five practical tips
any business can use to reduce the risks and enhance the reliability of IT systems.
- Know your risks: Power outages are often assumed to be rare and unlikely events but
severe weather is a major threat to power systems; three of the top five most significant
outages reported in 2008 were caused by Hurricane Ike, Hurricane Gustav and tropical
storm Hanna. These storms affected approximately five million people according to
Eaton’s Blackout Tracker (www.eaton.com/blackouttracker), an award-winning online tool
that provides a snapshot of reported power outages across North America. With this
interactive site, visitors can see the cause, duration and number of people affected by a
blackout and view causes per state or region.
- Consider your investments: Even a small server configuration and local area network
(LAN) represents an investment of tens of thousands of dollars. To that, add applications,
management systems and critical databases, and it is clear that significant company
assets depend on power that is not always dependable. Eaton’s Blackout Tracker Annual
Report cataloged more than 2,000 U.S. power outages in 2008.
- Power problems are equal-opportunity threats: Computers, servers and networks are
just as critical to a small business as a data center is to a large enterprise. In addition to
severe weather, equipment failures, lightning, copper thieves, even wayward snakes can
cause power disruptions that have the potential to bring business to a halt. Look beyond
generators and surge suppressors and consider an uninterruptible power system (UPS).
- Treat any IT equipment location as a data center: In small to medium-sized
businesses the rack environment may be the data center, but when planning this
environment it is still important to consider the same logistics as in a large data center:
access control, thermal management, power protection, power distribution, cable
management, flexibility and monitoring.
- Determine the level of power protection needed: Consider what type of UPS, best
deployment strategy and how much UPS capacity is required for your business. Assess
how much battery power you need to shut down systems or switch to backup generators
in case of an emergency. If an outage extends past the limits of backup systems, power
management software can orchestrate the selective, sequential shutdown of loads to
extend available battery backup time.
A comprehensive power protection plan should not only address power failure, but also other
problems such as power sags and surges, line noise and frequency variation. Eaton offers a
variety of devices that can protect IT equipment against the inherent unreliability of utility
power. UPSs and generators represent the most common power protection devices to
protect data and equipment.
To access the Eaton Blackout Tracker or request a copy of the 2008 annual report, visit
www.eaton.com/blackouttracker. Eaton will continue to track all named storms throughout
2009. To learn about Eaton’s power quality products, visit www.eaton.com/powerquality.
Eaton’s electrical business is a global leader in power distribution, power quality, control and
industrial automation products and services. Eaton’s global electrical product lines, including
Cutler-Hammer®, Moeller®, Powerware®, Holec®, MEM®, Santak®, and MGE Office Protection
Systems™ provide customer-driven PowerChain Management® solutions to serve the power
system needs of the data center, industrial, institutional, government, utility, commercial,
residential, and OEM markets worldwide.
Eaton Corporation is a diversified power management company with 2008 sales of $15.4
billion. Eaton is a global technology leader in electrical components and systems for power
quality, distribution and control; hydraulics components, systems and services for industrial
and mobile equipment; aerospace fuel, hydraulics and pneumatic systems for commercial
and military use; and truck and automotive drivetrain and powertrain systems for
performance, fuel economy and safety. Eaton has approximately 70,000 employees and sells products to customers in more than 150 countries. For more information, visit
www.eaton.com.