50 min

#12: Optimizing for Sustainability nCast: The Cloud Optimization Podcast from nOps

    • Tech News

Tech thought leader and host of the Kubernetes Unpacked podcast Kristina Devochko joins nCast today to talk all things cloud cost optimization, Kubernetes and green tech. 

We start by talking about the fact that many companies aren’t even using HALF of their compute resources. But does slashing your AWS bill necessarily mean that you’re saving the plant? We delve into cost optimization and how it aligns (or not) with sustainability. 

Kristina shares her insights on measuring your cloud carbon footprint and the tools you need (KEDA, Karpenter, Kepler) to increase cloud sustainability. We discuss key practical ways to get started cutting unnecessary cloud waste, from eliminating orphaned resources to scheduling during off hours. 

Plus, we're revealing how nOps has managed to run our production on Spot instances — talk about recycling! 

0:00 - 1:09: Introduction

1:10 - 4:20: Sustainability at Kubecon Europe and other recent events

4:21 - 9:31: Is cost optimization the same as sustainability?

9:32 - 12:53: Green data centers and your carbon footprint

12:54 - 15:21: Portability and the downsides of over-committing to pricing plans

15:22 - 19:51: Measuring your organization’s cloud sustainability

19:53 - 26:51: KEDA, Karpenter, Kepler and the tools you need

26:52 - 31:12: Leveraging available Spot capacity and choosing instances

31:13 - 37:15: Running production environments on Spot 

37:15 - 44:46: Continual rightsizing and automated tools

44:47 - 48:18: Carbon-efficient Karpenter scaling

Show notes


GitHub issue for proposal of carbon-efficient design to Karpenter that needs some community support


Kepler project


Carbon-aware KEDA operator


Cloud Carbon Footprint open source tool


BoaviztAPI open source API for environmental impacts of ICT


APIs that provide electricity data, data on carbon emissions and electricity sources: https://app.electricitymaps.com and https://watttime.org


CNCF TAG Environmental Sustainability


Contact Kristina Devochko


Kristina Devochko’s Tech blog

Tech thought leader and host of the Kubernetes Unpacked podcast Kristina Devochko joins nCast today to talk all things cloud cost optimization, Kubernetes and green tech. 

We start by talking about the fact that many companies aren’t even using HALF of their compute resources. But does slashing your AWS bill necessarily mean that you’re saving the plant? We delve into cost optimization and how it aligns (or not) with sustainability. 

Kristina shares her insights on measuring your cloud carbon footprint and the tools you need (KEDA, Karpenter, Kepler) to increase cloud sustainability. We discuss key practical ways to get started cutting unnecessary cloud waste, from eliminating orphaned resources to scheduling during off hours. 

Plus, we're revealing how nOps has managed to run our production on Spot instances — talk about recycling! 

0:00 - 1:09: Introduction

1:10 - 4:20: Sustainability at Kubecon Europe and other recent events

4:21 - 9:31: Is cost optimization the same as sustainability?

9:32 - 12:53: Green data centers and your carbon footprint

12:54 - 15:21: Portability and the downsides of over-committing to pricing plans

15:22 - 19:51: Measuring your organization’s cloud sustainability

19:53 - 26:51: KEDA, Karpenter, Kepler and the tools you need

26:52 - 31:12: Leveraging available Spot capacity and choosing instances

31:13 - 37:15: Running production environments on Spot 

37:15 - 44:46: Continual rightsizing and automated tools

44:47 - 48:18: Carbon-efficient Karpenter scaling

Show notes


GitHub issue for proposal of carbon-efficient design to Karpenter that needs some community support


Kepler project


Carbon-aware KEDA operator


Cloud Carbon Footprint open source tool


BoaviztAPI open source API for environmental impacts of ICT


APIs that provide electricity data, data on carbon emissions and electricity sources: https://app.electricitymaps.com and https://watttime.org


CNCF TAG Environmental Sustainability


Contact Kristina Devochko


Kristina Devochko’s Tech blog

50 min