Adaptive algorithm helps UPS solution reduce the power bills of UK businesses by £10m over next five years
Chloride Trinergy is the first high power UPS with an adaptive algorithm that continually monitors the power supply and automatically selects the most efficient operating mode. The algorithm enables the most power-dependent businesses to optimize operating costs and to cut up to seven figures from electricity bills. Implementing a Chloride Trinergy UPS will also provide business continuity for their critical systems. The company claims the system is the most efficient Class 1 UPS currently available for protecting mission critical infrastructure, such as Tier 3 and Tier 4 data centers, from disruptions to mains power supply.
Emiliano Cevenini, vice president marketing, EMEA, Emerson Network Power, explained: “At a conservative estimate the Chloride Trinergy devices already in use in the UK are set to cut around £10,000,000 from their operator’s electricity bills over the next five years – not counting the base rate levy and additional penalties under the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme. The Chloride Trinergy’s unique concept with its adaptive algorithm is riding data center demand for total reliability, cutting the cost of critical power and infrastructure availability.”
Chloride Trinergy already provides more than 100 MW of back-up power to data center applications in finance, government and dispersed networks worldwide. The technology is suited to the UK where the growth of data centers and power-heavy businesses has been constrained by the availability of grid power. Chloride Trinergy is optimized to draw minimum current from the incoming AC supply, providing the user with more power from an existing electrical supply source than other UPS systems. Additionally, Chloride Trinergy’s qualification for Enhanced Capital Allowances (ECAs), along with the provisions of the CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme (formerly the Carbon Reduction Commitment), means that capital costs can be written off against taxable profits and that efficiency savings will attract financial rewards.
As two of the biggest high-tech economies in Europe, the UK and Germany account for more than 50 MW of Chloride Trinergy UPS capacity. However, countries with growing knowledge economies and expanding data centre capacity – Brazil, Russia, China and Turkey – are already showing themselves to be prime markets for Chloride Trinergy.
Existing relationships have been key to the rapid take up of Chloride Trinergy, particularly in sectors where the turnover in power infrastructure is, otherwise, relatively slow. For example, Emerson Network Power’s Chloride business has a long-standing relationship with financial services IT, helping to propel worldwide sales of Chloride Trinergy to the position where it has overtaken the 62 MW of Chloride branded UPS systems already installed at Canary Wharf in London, previously the largest single concentration in Europe.
Visit Emerson Network Power at www.EmersonNetworkPower.com.