Schneider Electric today announced it has seen 4% growth in the last quarter, as well as 9% in the first nine months of 2012, with infrastructure, buildings, power and IT business units showing the most momentum, during the first day of its two day event at Jumeirah Beach Hotel in Dubai.
The company stated the worldwide datacentre market has witnessed a growth of 22% in 2012, to US$105 billion from US$86 billion in 2011. The Middle East is the fastest growing sector in this category.
The company also reported robust global growth in sales for the first three quarters of 2012, recording a rise of 14.9% for infrastructure and 18% for IT business.
Schneider Electric, which has a presence in all the countries of the Middle East, is represented by 5,000 employees, two distribution centres and eight manufacturing plants in the region.
The announcements were made at a press briefing held on the opening day of Schneider Electric’s Middle East Datacenter Solutions Conference titled ‘Power to the Cloud’. The session was headlined by senior management executives from Schneider Electric including Mike Hughes, Senior VP, EMEA, IT Business, Goktug Gur, Country President, UAE and Oman, Paul-Francois Cattier, Global Vice-President – Datacenters, IT Business, and Christian Bertrand, Vice-President, MEA – IT Business.
Addressing the press conference, Goktug Gur said: “Schneider Electric offers a comprehensive portfolio of products and solutions. Our strong reach within the region and resilient relations with our partners and customers have helped us capture a fair share of the market in this critical geography across our business units.
“The Middle East and the Gulf is extremely crucial to the overall growth of the company. As part of our expansion plans across the region, we are looking to grow our team of professionals and the number of offices in the region. We also aim to forge new partnerships with distributors.”
The company stated that it expects virtualisation and cloud computing will promote a transformation in services automation and provisioning through driving greater efficiencies within the datacentre.
“As one of the top three players in datacentre infrastructure management, Schneider Electric is in a unique position to bring customers innovative solutions that meet the most specific of requirements. Our emphasis on quality ensures that our solutions are designed, developed and delivered by leading technologists,” said Cattier.
Schneider Electric’s focus on cloud virtualisation comes at a time when IT spending in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) is set to rise 1.4% in 2012 and reach US$1.154 trillion by 2013, according to Gartner. Leveraging this forecast, Schneider Electric said it aims to capitalise on the growing demand for cloud and virtualised environments.
“Datacentres are a cornerstone for businesses, and as demand for storage and operation continues to expand, we are providing the right solutions to manage the power and cooling of this business critical infrastructure,” said Bertrand.
The media briefing additionally earmarked datacentre infrastructure management (DCIM) software as another area for robust growth over the next five years, with estimates of 60% market penetration by 2014 – a significant jump from one percent in 2012. The adoption of DCIM continues to prove effective in contributing to energy savings and streamlined operations.