Just a day after the government
unveiled
plans to ensure its entire IT estate carbon neutral by 2013, the Environment
Agency has revealed it is on track to sign "the most sustainable green
government IT contract ever" later this year.
Speaking in an
exclusive
interview with BusinessGreen.com's sister title IT Week,
Simon Pitt, head of corporate information services at the agency, said that it
was working on a £750m 10-year IT outsourcing contract designed to impose
stringent sustainability criteria on both the primary supplier and its sub
contractors.
"The deal will have very clear objectives for sustainability and green IT,"
he said. "We will make sure the provider we appoint is absolutely committed to
rolling this type of contract out both down through its supply chain and into
its other outsourcing contracts."
Pitt said the Environment Agency was already working with the Cabinet Office,
which is managing the government's green IT strategy with a view to using the
final contract as a template for other government deals.
"If we can get the contract right and cascade it throughout the government
sector it would be a real coup," he said, adding that private sector firms would
also be invited to use the criteria in their supply contracts. "If we can get
our outsourcing partner to put in standard green terms that it will then use in
its private-sector contracts, then the benefit from that would be absolutely
huge,” he explained.
Pitt also revealed that the Agency's IT department is working on a number of
projects to help improve its flood warning systems, including an initiative to
integrate data from 110 of the Met Office’s real-time rain gauges into new, more
detailed river forecasting models.
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