IT Industry To Hit Carbon Reduction Targets
The global IT sector is on target to reduce its annual CO2 emissions by 54 million metric tons by June 2011, according to CSCI
A study by Climate Savers Computing Initiative (CSCI), a global consortium dedicated to reducing the energy consumption of end-to-end computing, showed what CompTIA, a non-profit trade association for the IT industry, called a “sizeable reduction” in the annual CO2 emissions associated with information technology (IT) equipment. The study released by the Climate Savers Computing Initiative (CSCI) shows that the IT sector has reduced CO2 emission associated with IT equipment by more than 32 million metric tons worldwide since 2007.
CompTIA is a sponsor of CSCI, a global industry coalition formed in 2007 to reduce the environmental impact of new and emerging IT equipment through energy efficiency. The study was conducted by Natural Logic to assess progress of the CSCI’s goal of reducing annual CO2 emissions from the IT sector by 54 million metric tons by June 2011. The research showed that annual CO2 emissions from IT equipment have decreased by 32 million to 36 million metric tons worldwide since 2007, equivalent to taking nine coal-fired power plants offline and is equal to more than $2 billion (£1.3bn) in annual energy savings.
Further reductions to come
Todd Thibodeaux, president and chief executive officer of CompTIA , said the results of the study indicate that the industry is on the right track. “Our members remain committed and dedicated to CSCI’s energy efficiency mission,” he said. “We look forward to helping achieve even greater CO2 emission reductions in the coming years.”
Additionally, the study indicated the IT sector is on target to achieve CSCI’s reduction goal by the end of its 2010 fiscal year in June 2011. The organisation said it plans to expand its focus to include commercial and home networking systems and devices. CSCI will begin by setting new energy efficiency criteria for networking technologies. These new criteria will be developed by working with members and through alliances with the US Environmental Protection Agency and others, the organisation stated.
As part of this expansion, commercial and residential routers and switches, commercial WLAN, and security and access devices will be incorporated into the organisation’s environmental mission, with the goal of reducing annual CO2 emissions by an additional 38 million metric tons by 2015. CSCI said this will results in $5 billion (£3.2bn) in annual energy cost savings.
Studying the big picture
The study covered the first three programme years of CSCI, Initiative, from 1 July 1 2007 to 30 June 2010. Data was compiled by examining member company progress on power-management adoption and market data, including shipment and installed-base information, PSU efficiency levels, number of units sold worldwide, operating systems in use, market research, and estimates from industry analysts.
“As the number of networked devices continues to increase the energy demands on networks and networking equipment will increase in step,” said Rick Bauer, director of product management for CompTIA. “With this growth, there is significant energy and cost savings potential. CSCI and CompTIA recognise that in order to achieve end-to-end computing energy efficiency, we must address the energy used by connected devices and their interaction with the network.”