The benefits of going green have been well documented, so it is perhaps
surprising that so few organisations appear to have taken comprehensive measures
to reduce the carbon emissions produced by their IT equipment.
One reason may be that green IT skills remain informal. For the moment,
responsibility for ensuring that computer equipment is environmentally-friendly
is simply another aspect of procurement and management that falls on the
shoulders of IT staff.
Many organisations have also not yet implemented specific green IT policies
or carbon emission reduction targets which would merit the appointment of
specialist environmental computing staff.
The National Computing
Centre (NCC) canvassed a number of its members about their attitudes to
green computing during a conference on the subject in October last year. Of
those who took part in the survey, only 32 per cent said their organisation had
published a corporate environmental strategy, with another 33 per cent saying
they were in the planning stage.
“Clearly it is the start of the journey for many organisations – they
understand they have to do something, but by and large have not formulated a
policy yet,” said NCC group marketing manager Mike Dean. “There is definitely
more interest in green IT; not a flood but more than a trickle.”
Ben Cartland is an associate at
Acre Resources, a
specialist recruitment consultancy focused on the environment, corporate social
responsibility, sustainability and climate change sectors, and which supplies
personnel to large corporates, consultancies and non-government organisations.
“Our clients tend not to have anybody in-house focused solely on green IT,
but they do have people who are broadly environmentally-focused. In many cases,
it is outsourced to third-party developers or collaborative organisations,” he
says.
Dean, meanwhile, says it is the IT director who tends to take responsibility
for green IT, rather than a specialist sustainability director, or somebody
outside the IT function. “Organisations trust their own IT guys to come up with
environmental directives,” he says.
“I have not come across NCC members who have appointed somebody in the IT
department specifically to handle green IT policies, but in large organisations
such as HSBC and
The Co-operative
Group, people are assigned roles that govern how IT can implement corporate
green IT policies.”
But Tim Turquand, consultant at business and IT strategy consultancy
Morse, says organisations
can find it hard to train staff in the requisite skills, especially as there is
no standard yet. “The IT guys that tend to have a personal interest in reducing
the company carbon emissions are following a general trend in their lives –
they tend to be the ones driving carbon-friendly cars and so on,” he says.
Demand for specific green computing skills remains low, but Acre’s Cartland
says the consultancy is seeing increased demand for programmers and web
developers able to create and integrate carbon calculators into software. There
is also a heightened interest in consultants and sustainability managers who can
provide advice across the business, including IT.
“What we see coming to the fore in the past year or so, is opportunities
based around new and upcoming companies coming to market with new software that
will help organisations track and monitor their carbon emissions. The idea of
being able to align company activities all the way down the IT chain and assess
the carbon impact is very interesting,” he says.
On the hardware side, Acre has also noticed more environmental focus for
manufacturers who want to make sure their equipment is Energy Star-compliant.
“In most organisations that manufacture hardware, there will be somebody from an
environmental background who is managing and auditing the whole thing, and
making sure that management systems are ISO 14001 and ISO 9000 compliant,” says
Cartland.
Another reason many organisations are not yet setting targets specifically
around green computing stems from being unaware how much money they are wasting
by running non energy-efficient equipment, says Turquand. “Most are not aware
what the problem is actually costing them – it is difficult to reduce carbon
emissions by 20 per cent if you do not know what those emissions are now. The
problem is linking the green agenda specifically to green computing,” he says.
NCC research suggests only 12 per cent of IT professionals said they had
implemented environmental auditing activities, while 26 per cent say they would
consider doing so. The majority of organisations are, therefore, still not
taking active steps to evaluate their IT carbon footprint.
Turquand has some practical advice for IT professionals looking to implement
green computing practices for the first time.
“Knowing what equipment you have is the first problem, and you would be
surprised how many of Morse’s clients are not 100 per cent sure where their
assets are located or what they are doing,” he says. “There are often servers in
datacentre racks sitting idle from projects which are months gone by, which
nobody has powered down or turned off. In some cases, they are buying new
equipment when older kit can still be used for the purpose.”
Companies should also identify which items of equipment represent the biggest
drain on power, which are about to reach the end of their service life, and
which datacentre technologies need to be recycled or redistributed.
Such factors are significant, because the biggest potential barrier to the
adoption of green IT practices is a lack of knowledge in the organisation about
how to act in an environmentally sensitive manner. Eighteen per cent of IT
professionals surveyed by the NCC said they always evaluated the carbon
footprint of any new IT systems they purchase, although 44 per cent said they
did not consider the environmentally-friendly nature of IT equipment.
“Many do not know the real state of their IT power consumption, which makes
it difficult for them to improve it. It is not always the people in IT who see
the energy bills, for example, but usually those in facilities management. If
you cannot measure it, you cannot manage it,” says Dean.
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