Nokia
Siemens has unveiled a network package which the company claims can achieve
savings of up to 70 per cent in energy consumption at mobile base stations.
A combination of energy-efficient mobile equipment packages use a
power-saving mode at night when base-station traffic is much lower than during
the day.
The Nokia Siemens Energy Efficiency solution also reduces energy consumption
by up to 30 per cent by changing the minimum temperature requirement for a base
station.
Increasing typical indoor base station temperatures from 25 degrees to 40
degrees reduces the amount of power expended on air cooling, according to the
company.
The energy saving package comprises four main elements:
"The Energy Efficiency solution makes good green business sense," said Ari
Lehtoranta, head of the Radio Access business unit at Nokia Siemens Networks.
"By bringing state-of-the-art products and software together we can reduce
adverse environmental impact while generating considerable cost savings for our
operator customers."
Nokia Siemens said that the new package is just the first of a wide range of
energy-savings initiatives.
Industry analysts have applauded the announcement. "Nokia Siemens' move is a
welcome one," said Jeremy Green, principal analyst at
Ovum.
"The company is also attempting to reduce its own carbon footprint, even
though it estimates that 80 per cent of its products' impact comes from their
lifelong use rather than their production."
Nokia Siemens is also working with independent auditors to measure its CO2
emissions, and expects to publish targets next year.
In the meantime, the firm claims that video conferencing allowed it to hold
20,000 virtual meetings last year.
Comments
Have your say on this article