The rapid growth of cloud computing and data-intensive tech means the IT industry’s carbon footprint is no longer negligible. Data centres already consume roughly 1% of the world’s electricity, and the ICT sector now generates about 2.8% of global greenhouse gases. In this context, businesses are under pressure to make IT more efficient and more eco-friendly.
GreenOps, short for Green Operations, is the emerging discipline that aims to do exactly that. It applies operational best practices to minimise the environmental impact of IT and cloud environments.
In practice, GreenOps means right-sizing resources, cutting waste, and choosing cleaner energy in cloud and data centre operations.
What is GreenOps?
GreenOps (Green Operations) is the practice of managing IT and cloud workloads to reduce environmental impact. In essence, GreenOps builds on FinOps (financial cloud optimisation) by adding environmental metrics.
Key objectives of GreenOps include:
- Right-sizing and efficiency. Ensure compute, storage and network capacity match actual needs, avoiding over-provisioned servers or idle resources that waste energy.
- Reducing energy use. Operate hardware in the most energy-efficient way. For example by using efficient data centre designs or turning off unused equipment.
- Lowering emissions. Shift workloads to use renewable energy and low-carbon resources. This may involve moving to cloud regions powered by green grids or purchasing green energy credits.
Together, these practices seek the best balance between cost and carbon. NTT Data summarises this dual goal: GreenOps strives for “guaranteeing operations not only at the lowest possible cost, but also at the lowest possible environmental impact“. And it emphasises that sustainability should not go against efficiency. In many cases, cutting carbon also cuts cost. GreenOps extends financial cloud management to include the planet. It turns every watt saved into a win on both the bottom line and the carbon footprint.
Note: GreenOps is closely related to FinOps. Where FinOps optimises cloud spending, GreenOps optimizes cloud energy and emissions.
GreenOps Strategies and Practices
GreenOps relies on concrete technical strategies. Many of them are familiar to cloud architects, but with an explicit sustainability focus. In practice, engineers combine proven FinOps tasks with greener choices:
- Monitor cloud carbon metrics. All major cloud providers now offer carbon dashboards and APIs (AWS Customer Carbon Footprint Tool, Azure Sustainability Calculator, Google Cloud’s Carbon Footprint, etc). A first step is always to measure emissions. You can then establish your baseline to then track changes.
- Rightsize and eliminate waste. Just as FinOps teams hunt for unused resources, GreenOps hunts “zombie” servers and idle services that waste power. This is akin to unplugging devices when not in use, an obvious step that saves both money and carbon.
- Optimise workload placement and timing. Run workloads in regions and times with cleaner power. Many cloud providers offer “carbon-aware” scheduling. For instance, you might schedule batch jobs in data centres when renewable generation is high or in regions that use more green energy.
- Use serverless and scalable services. Serverless functions and container platforms scale to zero when idle, avoiding the constant draw of fully provisioned servers.
- Move to greener infrastructure. Select cloud instance types and storage options designed for efficiency. Use storage tiering to keep archival data on low-energy storage, and consider newer, more energy-efficient hardware.
Many cloud providers are racing toward green power. For example, Google Cloud commits to 100% renewable energy by 2030, AWS aims for 100% renewable by 2025, and Microsoft Azure has set a goal to be carbon-negative by 2030.
The key GreenOps practices can be summarised in six steps:
- Right-size resources: Match compute, memory and storage to actual needs.
- Schedule workloads smartly: Run flexible jobs (like backups) during off-peak hours or when renewable supply is high.
- Select low-carbon regions: Host important workloads in regions with greener energy.
- Use serverless/containers: Swap to consumption-based computing that scales to zero when unused.
- Tier storage: Move unused accessed data to lower-energy storage classes such as cold storage.
- Eliminate “zombies”: Identify and retire unused instances, databases, and network attachments that continue to drain power.
Together, these steps integrate seamlessly into DevOps and cloud CI/CD workflows, making sustainability just another metric alongside performance and cost.
Benefits of GreenOps
- Cost and Efficiency Gains: Cutting waste means spending less on cloud. Studies show that roughly 30–40% of cloud spend is often wasted. GreenOps cuts this waste, typically yielding 20–40% savings on cloud bills.
- Regulatory and Risk Mitigation: Governments and investors increasingly demand environmental disclosure. For example, the EU now requires data centres to report detailed energy, water and emission metrics. The UK government’s new sustainability rules mandate verified carbon footprints for major suppliers and set a target of 75% renewable power in new data centres by 2025. By monitoring the right metrics, GreenOps ensures companies can meet these regulations.
- Brand and Competitive Advantage: Sustainability is a selling point. Customers and partners prefer companies that can demonstrably shrink their carbon footprints. In an IT context, showing you run on “green cloud” can differentiate your offerings.
- Innovation and Resilience: GreenOps encourages an innovative mindset around efficiency. For example, Google recovers waste heat from data centres for office heating, and data centres are exploring liquid cooling to cut energy use. Pushing for higher utilisation and smarter scheduling can lead to more robust, resilient infrastructure.
In summary, GreenOps turns sustainability into a strategic asset. By treating emissions as another form of waste alongside cost, it rewards smart technical decisions with both environmental and business returns.
Getting Started with GreenOps
For tech leaders and directors interested in GreenOps, the first steps are:
- Measure Everything. Use cloud carbon reporting tools immediately. Know your current footprint, and include it in dashboards alongside cost and performance.
- Leverage Existing FinOps Practices. Most GreenOps wins come from doing FinOps basics e.g. rightsizing, shutting down idle instances, scheduling.
- Choose Renewables. When architecting systems, prefer data centre regions with low carbon intensity. Use managed cloud services that auto-sleep idle resources. If you control physical infrastructure, invest in on-site solar or select green-certified hosting.
- Incentivise Teams. Just as FinOps made engineering accountable for cost, make teams aware of the sustainability impact of their decisions. Display carbon metrics in real time and reward reductions.
Treat GreenOps as an ongoing culture shift. True GreenOps means aligning finance, operations and environmental goals into one strategy. It is a balance between operational and financial efficiency with the smallest environmental impact. This tends to mean forming a multidisciplinary team that reports on both finances and carbon.
Conclusion
GreenOps is a new operating model for 21st-century IT. By building sustainability into the core of how we run and pay for cloud services, GreenOps promises cleaner skies and larger profit margins. With regulators tightening rules and customers demanding green credentials, adopting GreenOps is both the right thing and the smart thing to do.