The Egyptian IT minister introduced a conference I spoke at recently. He observed that this was the first time he had been at a conference that covered IT’s impact on climate change. It is not difficult to understand why he was surprised, but a panel discussion at Intellect’s first climate change conference last month really brought home to me why it matters to all of us working in IT, and why it matters now.
Intellect’s report High Tech: Low Carbon, launched at the same conference, included a reference to recent work by the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change, which presented some very alarming findings. According to its calculations, the rate of carbon abatement proposed by the UK government’s Climate Change Bill may be enough to meet our 2050 targets but it is not enough to prevent disastrous levels of CO2 accumulating in the atmosphere levels over 600 parts per million (ppm), enough to make a temperature rise of 4°C a likely scenario.
We need to exceed these targets through radical changes in technology and behaviour. Ramping up the use of technologies such as building management services, logistics software, high-speed broadband and collaborative working software has suddenly become a lot more important.
While this is not a new approach, it is very important because it is the total of CO2 emissions that matters, even more than hitting a particular target by a particular date.
We must do everything we can, collectively and individually, to identify low-carbon technologies as early as possible, to accelerate their development and support their adoption. This is where IT managers have a vital role to play.
The UK government is providing unprecedented levels of support for innovation through schemes like the Competitiveness and Innovation Framework Programme and the Energy Technologies Institute.
Specialist sources of venture capital, such as Carbon Trust Investments, are also emerging alongside traditional offerings. The European Commission supports similar approaches, backed by funding under the Entrepreneurship and Innovation programme. In short, an environment suited to the development of low-carbon technologies is being created.
But this is only part of the picture. The more IT managers demand low-carbon products and services from their suppliers, the more the industry will develop them. Customers can therefore drive competition around efficiency. We already see this clearly in laptop computers, for which battery life and energy efficiency is an important purchasing criterion. Laptops, as a result, are very energy efficient.
On the supplier side of the industry, we need to provide more energy choice and better information on efficiency, but we also need to encourage our customers to take energy efficiency into account in their purchasing. For most customers, energy efficiency is a long way down on the list of criteria.
Chief executive officers at many of the industry’s largest companies are committed to both improving the energy efficiency of their products and to developing products that will help save energy in other ways.
IT departments should take a holistic view of their energy consumption and act to reduce it as soon as possible. A good start might be to make sure the IT department is responsible for its energy costs. I would also like to see more customers telling their suppliers to become “greener”. As a customer you hold tremendous power over the vendor community. Use it.
While environmentally-friendly IT has been getting a lot of coverage, significant improvements are slow in coming 11 Feb 2008
The happy-smiley environmental claims of printer makers are nonsense and should be ditched 02 Nov 2007
Storage Expo’s green space was full of vendors looking to make money, and IT chiefs looking to save it 30 Oct 2007
Over the past few years the IT sector has transformed itself from an industry with the kind of environmental record that made strip mining look pretty conscientious into a champion of green business practices. So what has driven this change, and what does it mean for corporate IT chiefs? 11 Sep 2007
Can Wal-Mart, the rampaging behemoth of Bentonville, ever really embrace sustainability? Joel Makower argues it can and it might just drag the rest of us along for the ride 24 Oct 2007
The climate is fast approaching a dangerous tipping point, now a policy tipping point is urgently needed if we are to head off catastrophe 18 Apr 2008
Focus on energy savings through fuel efficiency for homes and public and commercial buildings 04 Jul 2008
ActionAid accuses G8 of driving more people into poverty by pursing biofuels and cutting agri-aid 04 Jul 2008
Businesses' new found focus on the environment may be welcome, but according to Conrad MacKerron, it is taking attention away from workers' rights issues – and the credibility of the entire green business movement could be at risk 03 Jul 2008
It may be a year old, but as Dell's Jonathan Perry explains, firms looking to get rid of their old IT kit still need to pay attention to the WEEE directive 02 Jul 2008
Telling customers about your environmental targets is all well and good but, as Paul Thomas argues, they are meaningless if you do not know how they are to be achieved 01 Jul 2008




