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Showing posts with label Energy companies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy companies. Show all posts

Nov 19, 2014

High-Growth Datacenter Sector Drives Indian Rack and Rack Options Market, notes Frost & Sullivan

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High-Growth Datacenter Sector Drives Indian Rack and Rack Options Market, notes Frost & Sullivan
Frost & Sullivan

Technology adoption among small and medium-sized businesses also spurs demand
The boom in information processing and data transfer activity in India has been encouraging investment in datacenters. Small and medium businesses/enterprises (SMBs/SMEs) in the country have been in expansion and transition mode. As information and communication technology (ICT) will play a vital role in their continued growth, captive and hosted datacenters are expected to account for a substantial portion of IT spending. This in turn will fuel demand for rack and rack options. In fact, the market prospects of rack and rack option suppliers will only brighten over the next five years as the Indian datacenter market gains momentum owing to steady domestic and international demand for IT services.

New analysis from Frost & Sullivan, India Rack and Rack Options Market, finds that the market earned revenues of INR 6.59 billion in fiscal year (FY) 2014 and estimates this to reach INR 10.31 billion in FY 2019. The study covers the end-user segments of datacenters, telecom, and SMEs/SMBs.

“With the increase in data usage among mobile users and rising tenancy ratio of towers, telecom infrastructure providers across India will also find use for rack and rack options,” said Frost & Sullivan Energy & Environmental Industry Analyst.

Nevertheless, the slow replacement rates of racks have contained the market’s pace of development. As a result of technical advancements in the components and raw materials used to manufacture racks, these products last for 15 years. Hence, end users rarely have to replace or upgrade rack units, a trend which has depressed market participants’ overall revenues.

The profitability of rack and rack option suppliers across India has also suffered due to the price sensitivity of the market, caused partially by the presence of a large number of unorganized suppliers in the country. Since the degree of technical change and product innovation are low in the market, the barriers to entry are also low and thus market competition is intense. Unorganized suppliers with sheet metal production capacities tend to offer basic racks at more affordable rates than organized suppliers, eroding the bargaining power of organized suppliers.

“Once new players enter the market, and technological development and product portfolio diversification gain pace among existing rack suppliers, competition will become even stiffer,” noted the Analyst. “Rack and rack option suppliers across India should position themselves as one-stop solution providers, who sell products ranging from power distribution units to cooling and management software, to succeed in the market.”

If you are interested in a virtual brochure, which provides a brief synopsis of the research and a table of contents, then send an e-mail to Ravinder Kaur/ Priya George, Corporate Communications, at ravinder.kaur@frost.com/ priyag@frost.com, with your full name, company name, title, telephone number, company e-mail address, company website, city, state and country. Upon receipt of the above information, a brochure will be sent to you by e-mail.

India Rack and Rack Options Market is part of the Power Supplies & Batteries (http://www.powersupplies.frost.com) Growth Partnership Service program. Frost & Sullivan’s related studies include: Competitive Strategies Benchmarking in Data Center Physical Infrastructure Industry, Global Programmable Direct Current (DC) Power Supplies and Electronic Loads Market, Global Industrial UPS Market, and European Rack and Rack Options Market. All studies included in subscriptions provide detailed market opportunities and industry trends evaluated following extensive interviews with market participants.
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Jul 3, 2012

India Must Lead Global Sustainable Development Agenda Post Rio Plus 20 Summit

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New Delhi, Delhi, India, Monday, July 02, 2012 -- (Business Wire India)
The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) held a special media interaction on the challenges and opportunities in the context of global sustainable development agenda post the recently concluded Rio Plus 20 Summit today. Director General of TERI, Dr. R K Pachauri, Executive Director Dr. Leena Srivastava and Distinguished Fellows Nitin Desai, Ambassador Chandrashekhar Dasgupta & Dr. Prodipto Ghosh, reflected on the various issues raised at the Summit and underscored the need to tackle unsustainable means of production and consumption.

The recent culmination of the Rio Plus 20 Summit has once again fuelled socio-political debate on the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead on the road to sustainable development. While a number of environmental activists and NGOs have expressed deep disappointment with the outcome of this major event, several governments view it as a victory and vindication of their own specific stands. TERI’s distinguished speakers said the need of the hour was to engage concerned stakeholders to arrive at a consensus on critical issues such as equity between developed and developing nations in achieving sustainable development.

Speakers felt there were two ways of following the outcome of Rio+20. One was to conclude that nothing of substance and certainly no agreements were produced by this conference. The second view would be to conclude that the ‘future we want’ as documented as the outcome of the conference clearly provided a wide canvas of concepts and directions that the world could possibly adopt towards the pursuit of sustainable development.

Speakers also pointed out that at the Summit, the developed countries had attempted to rollback principles of equity, which were an integral outcome of the Rio Conference held in 1992. However, lauding the strong and united stand taken by the developing nations at the Summit, Dr. R K Pachauri, Director General, TERI, said: “It is time India takes the lead and takes charge of the intellectual leadership of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) raised at the Summit.” Dr. Pachauri further added, “The final produced at the culmination of the Rio Summit had enough substance for each community and stakeholder to pick up elements to promote the discourse of global sustainable development.”

Speaking at the occasion, Executive Director, TERI, Dr. Leena Srivastava said: “The final document recognised the need of clean energy to achieve sustainable development. Emphasis of the Summit was also on boosting education and capacity building to meet sustainability targets.”

Ambassador C. Dasgupta, a Distinguished Fellow at TERI, said: “The road ahead would focus on the evolution and scope of sustainable development goals (SDGs) and their relation to the Millennium Development Goals.”

Nitin Desai, Distinguished Fellow, TERI, said: “The interest and participation of corporate entities and the scientific and academic communities at the Summit was far greater at the Rio Plus 20 Summit than ever before. This is so because the trend is no longer limited to green consumerism, but to green investors.”

Dr. Pradipto Ghosh, Distinguished Fellow, TERI, opined: “The focus on sustainable production and consumption is the main point that has emerged from the Summit. Strong unity among the G-77 group to protect their individual development space has also come out strongly through the conference.”

Speakers also highlighted relevant opportunities to enhance the scope of the sustainable development agenda:

i) Profiling the elements of a green economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty eradication. The concept of green economy would need to take into account links between financing, technology, capacity building and national needs for sustainable development.

ii) Enunciating sustainable development goals and motivating of stakeholders, including business and industry to set in place a reporting system involving sustainability.

iii) Establishing regional, national, sub-national and local initiatives to implement the provisions of the Rio+20 document.

iv) Dealing effectively with the challenge of climate change and problems such as deforestation and loss of biodiversity as well as the problems of desertification, land degradation and drought.

v) Evaluating pathways to sustainable consumption and production.

About The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI):

From microbiology to global climate change, from smoke-filled rural kitchens to plush corporate boardrooms, from schoolchildren to heads of state—no sphere of human endeavor is unfamiliar to TERI. Headed by world-renowned economist and Nobel Prize winning climate scientist, Dr R K Pachauri, TERI is best described as an independent, not-for-profit research institute focused on energy, environment, and sustainable development and devoted to efficient and sustainable use of natural resources.
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