- New facility addresses power consumption challenges by efficiently absorbing more heat with a liquid-based coolant solution and can reduce need for space up to 77.5% by allowing customers to place fewer, more tightly packed servers into the racks.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) announced a new managed data centre hosting service in the UAE in partnership with Khazna Data Centres (Khazna), a leading provider of state-of-the-art hyperscale data centre solutions.
The new service supports the UAE’s national artificial intelligence (AI) strategy, which includes a series of AI projects with leading institutions in the region. The service provides access to a data centre facility fitted for end-to-end high-performance computing (HPC) technologies, purpose-built for AI, spanning compute, accelerated compute, software, networking and direct liquid-cooling (DLC).
Accelerating AI adoption
The investment in a DLC data centre, a significantly energy-efficient method compared to conventional air-cooling, supports the UAE’s effort to address rising power demands in the age AI, which is expected to grow by tenfold by 2026, according to the International Energy Agency.
The new data centre facility addresses power consumption challenges by efficiently absorbing more heat with a liquid-based coolant solution, offering 20.7 per cent higher performance per kW than air-cooled solutions.
With DLC, the data centre facility can reduce the need for space up to 77.5 per cent by allowing customers to place fewer, more tightly packed servers into the racks.
To accelerate time-to-production, HPE Services, which provides worldwide, 24/7 onsite and remote support to install and deploy systems, worked closely with Khazna to optimise its Abu Dhabi data centre to run AI and HPC workloads.
Through HPE GreenLake, new or existing customers gain flexible options to scale and pay for services monthly.
Environment-friendly
“HPE is bringing its direct-liquid cooled HPC capabilities to launch the first data centre facility of this kind in the UAE to make it widely accessible for customers in the region to run AI and other compute-intensive workloads,” Ahmad Alkhallafi, managing director, Emirates & Africa at HPE, said.
“With a broad spectrum of technology, deployment, and payment options, organisations have a choice to responsibly accelerate AI adoption, while they work towards the UAE’s goal and timeline to adopt patterns that reduce environmental stress.”
Compatible with a large variety of GPUs and CPUs, the integrated liquid cooled data centre technology gives customers a wide range of choices, allowing them to meet current and future system requirements.
By lowering the energy consumption per workload, the efficiencies from direct on-chip liquid cooling will help customers on their journey to be responsible for managing the carbon emissions from AI’s power-intensive demand.
“We are pleased to be helping HPE’s customers maximise their compute power to advance key initiatives in areas such as energy, financial services, health and life sciences, and manufacturing, while adopting IT sustainability best practices,” Hassan Alnaqbi, CEO at Khazna, said.
“Access to highly efficient data centre systems will play a key role in helping the UAE anticipate and take advantage of revolutionary technologies such as AI and to support its goal to make the economy more environment-friendly by providing world-leading data centre facilities.”