The report is based on in-depth analysis
of 338 Data Centre providers across North America with over 1,100 Data Centre
facilities across the region. North American Data Centre facilities vary
enormously in size and price point with individual wholesale providers having
over 1 million square feet of space with sharply reduced rates and local
colocation providers having facilities of 1,000 square feet or less serving a
specific area.
The new report identifies the key
overall Data Centre capacity and price trends in theUSA&Canada, and also
segments the market into three provider segments including - Local Colocation,
National Retail and National Wholesale Data Centre segments. The report finds
that each of these three Data Centre segments has its own characteristics and
serves its own user community with distinct products and pricing strategy, as
shown below:
- The Local Colocation Data Centre segment – provides individual rack space for SMEs, content and Telecom Providers serving a local geographical area as a single or regional facility provider. It offers competitive average individual rack space pricing, which is suited to a particular area and facility.
- The National Retail Data Centre segment – provides a mixture of bundled services with rack space, typically with a national footprint, offering cloud or cloud interconnect services. It offers bundled pricing with power access, IP and power consumption bundled into a higher average price per rack space, square foot or per kW rate. Average pricing can vary extensively according to the power bundle or facility used.
- The National Wholesale Data Centre segment – provides large scale Data Centre space – including data halls, complete facilities and “build to suit” facilities for large enterprises, content or Telecom Providers. Average pricing is typically based on a customized deal in square feet or per kW of power, with discounts of 40 to 60 per cent available when compared with average retail square foot or per kW rates.
The North America Data Centre – 2014 to
2019 report also provides a brief profile of 27 key Data Centre providers, who
together account for 65 per cent of total third party Data Centre raised floor
space in the region as of the end of 2014.
The report also provides a unique 5 year
forecast – from the end of 2014 to the end of 2019 – for both the overall Data
Centre market and average pricing (including average per square foot, rack
space & per kW pricing) in total and by each of the three core Data Centre
segments.
The report finds that significant new
Data Centre space will continue to be added in regions such as Northern
Virginia, Las Vegas, New Jersey & Sacramento. The new capacity is to have
an impact on average Data Centre prices in these regions. Northern Virginia
(Ashburn) in particular is projected to see a sharp increase in supply from new
facilities from Data Centre providers including DRT (Digital Realty Trust), DFT
(DuPont Fabros Technology), Raging Wire and Equinix.
Although there remains considerable
variation between individual Data Centre facility and region pricing in the
survey, average overall Data Centre pricing in North America will remain
relatively stable and is set to increase in the range of 1 to 3 per cent per
annum - depending on Data Centre segment.
The report also identifies the key
commercial trends driving Data Centre development in North America as the
sector matures, including –
- The rise of the Modular Data Centre – with new providers such as IO providing self-contained modular facilities which can be activated rapidly for specific customer demand as a low cost option,
- The merging of Wholesale & Retail Data Centre facilities – with selected Wholesale Data Centre providers bundling space and power to meet high-end retail customer requirements - attracted by the higher price points per square foot from enterprise users,
- More consolidation is taking place in the Data Centre sector – with Telecom Providers in particular bolstering their presence in the cloud & hosting segments through the acquisition of Data Centre specialists,
- New investment in so-called Tier 2 city Data Centre facilities – with providers such as 365 Data Center identifying smaller markets as higher margin opportunities as local users - in cities such as Nashville - require cloud, Telecom Provider & Cloud connectivity – as new Data Centre facilities are spread to the edge.
The report discovers that power for the DataCentre facility in North America is becoming a critical issue. Energy
costs in the United States can vary by as much as 3-times from state to state,
with Data Centre providers in high cost states - such as California – having to
adopt new technology to provide energy conservation measures for their
facilities as an essential customer feature.
The report highlights how North American
Data Centre facilities are being recognized as a crucial factor in economic
development. An increasing number of US states and city administrations are now
offering tax incentives to Data Centre providers and their customers as an
incentive for new investment and employment, with the rebate of sales tax from
the cost of IT equipment being the most common incentive for new investors.
Know more about this report
at
– http://mrr.cm/Zjb
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