Datacentre

IT's carbon emissions keep on climbing

Despite emergence of new energy-efficient systems, new reports insist the IT industry is struggling to reduce its carbon footprint

Written by James Murray

Two new reports have today highlighted the scale of the environmental challenge facing the UK's IT industry, revealing that carbon emissions from the sector are continuing to soar and many IT departments are ill-equipped to tackle the problem.

The first study, from environmental charity Global Action Plan's recently launched Environmental IT Leadership Team, concluded that ICT equipment accounts for two per cent of the world's carbon emissions, putting the sector on a par with the aviation industry.

Entitled An Inefficient Truth, the report also argued that emissions from IT were growing faster than those from aviation, noting that in 2006, 48 per cent more data storage capacity was sold than in the previous year, compared with a three per cent increase in UK air travel passengers in the same period.

Trewin Restorick, director of Global Action Plan and chairman of the Environmental IT Leadership Team, said that the scale of IT's carbon footprint meant that the government would have to target the sector if it is to comply with the legally binding emission reduction targets included in its soon-to-be-introduced climate change bill.

However, Restorick added that the problem was being exacerbated by government policies requiring ever-greater quantities of electronic data be stored. He argued that if the government wanted firms to cut their IT-related emissions, there was a need for a review of current data storage legislation and a greater onus on incentives and policies that were "more supportive and less contradictory".

Advocates of energy efficient IT systems such as virtualisation software and intelligent cooling technologies have long maintained that the products already exist to reduce the energy requirements of a typical IT department by up to 80 per cent.

However, the report's survey of 120 UK IT chiefs found that the vast majority of firms are not currently in any position to instigate an effective green IT strategy. Almost nine out of 10 respondents did not know their department's carbon footprint, while just 20 per cent had seen energy bills relating to IT's power use.

Six out of 10 of those surveyed identified cost and time pressures as the main barriers to adopting more sustainable IT strategies, with a majority also claiming tax breaks and industry-wide energy efficiency standards were required to help drive adoption of green technologies.

Tom Kelly, managing director of IT services firm and report sponsors Logicalis UK, warned that IT chiefs would have to learn to better evaluate the efficiency of their IT infrastructure and undertake greater measures to limit energy use if they wanted to head off more legislation.

The report came as a separate study from Fujitsu Siemens Computers estimated that over one million tonnes of excess carbon emissions are being generated as a result of the poor design of UK datacentres. The research found that a large chunk of datacentre-related carbon emissions, equivalent to the emissions of a city the size of Oxford, could be easily avoided if firms adopted energy efficient design principles, such as optimising server layout to limit pressure on cooling systems.

Steve Kendall-Smith, vice president for UK and Ireland at Fujitsu Siemens Computers, said that many firms were guilty of underestimating the environmental and financial impact of their poorly designed datacentres. "The truth is that many companies still do not grasp the disproportionate amount of power used by their datacentres, many of which are based on sprawling and/or ageing server farms that are costing businesses millions of pounds to manage," he added.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

 

IT carbon footprint to outpace aviation

Flabby businesses a prime target for legislation 05 Dec 2007

Review 2007: Green computing

Computing's review of the year looks back at the top stories about IT and the environment 18 Dec 2007

IT departments not measuring energy use

More than 60 per cent of firms say time and cost are the biggest barriers to sustainable IT 04 Dec 2007

today's top stories

Analysis: Will IE8 cause more problems than it solves?

Microsoft's new browser may lead to compatibility issues and affect online advertising 29 Aug 2008

CIO morale plummets as crunch hits

Fewer opportunities and less responsibility depress IT managers 27 Aug 2008

The pIT stop Q&A: Should packaged software users adopt SOA?

Our expert panel answer readers' questions 29 Aug 2008

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you recruit a student with an IT degree?

Would you recruit a student with an IT degree?

As IT student numbers plummet - would you recruit an IT graduate?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

A stressed CIOAudio

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

Bryan Glick video whiteboardVideo

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Myron HrycykAnalysis

General management skills are now as important as technical ability

A selection of leading chief information officers talk about what they see as the most important aspects of the role 28 Aug 2008

Internet Explorer logoAnalysis

Analysis: Will IE8 cause more problems than it solves?

Microsoft's new browser may lead to compatibility issues and affect online advertising 29 Aug 2008

Primary Navigation