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U.S. Datacenters Growing in Size But Declining in Numbers, According to IDC


The total number of datacenters (of all types) in the United States declined for the first time in 2009, falling by 0.7%. triggered by the economic crisis of 2008 and the resultant closing of hundreds and thousands of remote locations with server closets and rooms. At the same time, total datacenter capacity grew by slightly more than 1% as larger datacenter environments continued to rise despite the economic slowdown.

According to new research from International Data Corporation (IDC), these trends have continued in the years since 2009 and reflect a major change in datacenter and IT asset deployment that will accelerate further in coming years.

The dynamic driving these changes in the U.S. datacenter market center around the fast-growing array of applications and devices used to communicate and conduct business, the rapid digitization of vast amounts of unstructured data, and the desire to collect, store, and analyze this information in ever-greater volume and detail. This dynamic has had a significant impact on how businesses build, organize, and invest in datacenter facilities and assets.

"CIOs are increasingly being asked to improve business agility while reducing the cost of doing business through aggressive use of technologies in the datacenter," saidRick Villars, vice president, Datacenter and Cloud Research at IDC. "At the same time, they have to ensure the integrity of the business and its information assets in the face of natural disasters, datacenter disruptions, or local system failures. To achieve both sets of objectives, IT decision makers had to rethink their approach to the datacenter."

The most notable factor reshaping datacenter dynamics was the dramatic increase in the use of server virtualization to consolidate server assets. Virtualization and server consolidation drove significant declines in physical datacenter size and eliminated the need for many smaller datacenters as applications were moved to larger central datacenters. It also made investments in power and energy management that much more critical for datacenter managers.

While the aggressive use of virtualization has reduced the rate of growth in server deployments in datacenters, the creation, organization, and distribution of files and rich content are creating a rapid and sustained increase in storage deployments. One of the key characteristics of the content explosion is data centralization, driven by performance, compliance, and scale requirements. As a result, midsize and large datacenters are the main segments where the content explosion is having a major impact.

A third factor shaping the datacenter dynamic has been the shift toward a cloud model for application, platform, and infrastructure delivery. Here the focus is on extending the value and scale of virtualization by boosting operational efficiency and improving IT agility. Along with the content explosion, the buildout of public cloud offerings is driving major growth in the number and size of larger datacenters.

Combined, these factors will continue to drive a slow but steady decline in the number and size of smaller internal datacenters. For similar reasons, large internal datacenters will not grow at anywhere near the same rate as very large datacenters operated by service providers. By 2016, IDC expects the total number of datacenters in the U.S. will decline from 2.94 million in 2012 to 2.89 million.

This decline will be concentrated in internal server rooms and closets, with a very small decline in mid-sized local datacenters. Despite the slight decline in total datacenters, total datacenter space will increase significantly, growing from 611.4 million square feet in 2012 to more than 700 million square feet in 2016. By the end of the forecast period, IDC expects service providers will account for more than a quarter of all large datacenter capacity in place in the United States.



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